Daniel Jackson (
peacefulexplorer) wrote in
bigapplesauce2014-11-19 07:00 pm
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It's been the worst day since yesterday [closed]
The knotted mass of guilt in Daniel's chest hasn't gone away by the time he's on his way to Seth's apartment building, again, hands clenching and unclenching and wandering and ducking into his pockets and back out again a minute later.
Daniel feels like an idiot.
He feels like an idiot, because what good could an ordinary library in Manhattan possibly be for this kind of thing? Yesterday had passed in sporadic bursts of anxiety, horror over what the hell might be happening, creeping dread that this might not be reversible and then finally today Daniel's traitorous phone had buzzed to deliver several texts in rapid succession. Texts he should have received a full day ago. Short bursts of words and questions that should read as neutral and impersonal like any other text but don't because Seth had clearly, clearly not been in a good place by the time he'd faded from Daniel's range of vision and he must not have heard or processed any of the prior warnings because the texts all make it bleakly obvious he'd had no idea what was happening. Seth must have assumed the worse.
That would not be atypical for Seth to have assumed the worse.
The idea that Daniel had most assuredly been the cause of that makes him faintly, mildly nauseous.
He has to halt outside the building for a tight minute, his lungs a paradoxical mess of relief and jittering apprehension and no small amount of the always-persistent guilt until at last he makes an unerring line for the figure in front. The visible figure. Daniel's eyes don't slide right past and he doesn't need to constantly refocus and the gradually mounting panic tentatively starts to give way.
Daniel feels like an idiot.
He feels like an idiot, because what good could an ordinary library in Manhattan possibly be for this kind of thing? Yesterday had passed in sporadic bursts of anxiety, horror over what the hell might be happening, creeping dread that this might not be reversible and then finally today Daniel's traitorous phone had buzzed to deliver several texts in rapid succession. Texts he should have received a full day ago. Short bursts of words and questions that should read as neutral and impersonal like any other text but don't because Seth had clearly, clearly not been in a good place by the time he'd faded from Daniel's range of vision and he must not have heard or processed any of the prior warnings because the texts all make it bleakly obvious he'd had no idea what was happening. Seth must have assumed the worse.
That would not be atypical for Seth to have assumed the worse.
The idea that Daniel had most assuredly been the cause of that makes him faintly, mildly nauseous.
He has to halt outside the building for a tight minute, his lungs a paradoxical mess of relief and jittering apprehension and no small amount of the always-persistent guilt until at last he makes an unerring line for the figure in front. The visible figure. Daniel's eyes don't slide right past and he doesn't need to constantly refocus and the gradually mounting panic tentatively starts to give way.
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"That's not -" Daniel pulls his forehead away from the door, gathers himself, releases the thing, turns around, faces Seth directly. He knows this is how Seth operates, how if left to make his own conclusions the man will slide into his tendency for self-blame, assume he is the root of the problem and fold ever deeper into himself.
Daniel shakes his head, expression locked.
"No, I'm making it worse." The words are muttered, almost an undertone. He needs to make it clear to Seth that this is a resolution Daniel reached independently, that the potential decision to leave for the time being was entirely (selfishly) oriented around how he could help - and in light of the day's earlier misunderstanding, this had been such a poor choice in reasoning. The justifications boil out in turbid, disordered bursts of rapid self-judgment. "I'm - these are things that, that should be your choice to discuss, not mine, not - and not out of some, some single-minded selfish altruism to fix things that aren't fixable, not by their nature and not by my choice because that - isn't my choice and I shouldn't have assumed it was."
He stops to breathe because - because breathing is important, and Daniel seems to have forgotten that in the midst of his scalding, frustrated self-assessment. One hand creeps back to the door, but only for support's sake. The effort of explicating that diatribe has compounded itself with the weight of prolonged wakefulness, and the faint lightness in his head has returned.
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It doesn't sound like he's leaving because he can't be bothered to deal with it all, but because he really believes leaving is the best thing for both of them.
He can't blame Daniel for wanting to fix things. Because despite what he might think of himself, every time something heavy like this has come up, Daniel may have asked some intrusive questions, but then he has rectified himself, he's asserted that it is Seth's choice whether or not to talk about it, and... Seth somehow knows, or at least he believes, that whatever he might ask, especially if he's insistent enough, Daniel would do it.
The intense self-criticism definitely feels familiar to Seth, except it's ridiculous, because Daniel's got a fuck lot less to criticise himself for than Seth does.
"You're not making it worse, you twat," he says, stepping into the kitchen. He really needs to call Daniel names right now, because he is acting like a moron. Even if it's self-directed twattiness. And he probably is scared to deal with all of Seth's mess, because who wouldn't be, but if Daniel wants to leave, then he's damn well going to do it for the right and honest reasons, not because he fools himself into thinking it's the right thing to do.
"It's always been this bad. And if I don't want to talk about it, then I don't talk about it," he continues, pulling out two mugs and setting them on the kitchen top, pouring coffee into both of them. It's not fresh, it's the pot he made earlier this morning, but it's strong and it's hot, which is the important part. Then he carries them both over to the living room table, and sets Daniel's cup pointedly down on it.
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"I'm sorry," he sighs again, reigning himself back from another automatic backwards skid into overthinking the issue. "It's a pattern. You know. I poke things that shouldn't be touched, they break, and you'd think I'd've learned by now but - planets, civilizations, one after another, and good intentions don't mean anything if I can't fix what I've ruined." Because he was curious. Because he was fascinated. Because he wanted to help.
The coffee is a godsend. The fatigued, hazy patina over his mind cracks with each grateful sip, the headache from too many hours awake gradually easing out for the time being.
Daniel shoots Seth an ironic attempt at a smile, a bitter tightening of the corners of his mouth.
"Statistically, I'm due to screw something or someone else up again very soon, so. Careful."
He quickly returns to his coffee because he can't tell if he meant that as a joke.
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"If they broke that easily, they probably would've done regardless of whether you were there," he points heavily. But he can't imagine that kind of responsibility is easy to carry. It's exactly why Seth stopped dealing powers. He doesn't want that kind of responsibility, because so much could change, and following the money definitely wasn't the way to find the right hands for a power. And then he had done it again when he came here, and look what that led to.
"And if it helps, there's not much left of me not screwed up already," he adds. Because apparently stating painful truths as jokes is something they're doing now.
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Following that much more coherent discourse, Daniel draws the mug closer to himself and wraps both hands around it in a wordless protective movement, one thumb worrying at its rim absentmindedly.
"Considering everything you've been through - allowing yourself to simply continue is one of the most difficult choices someone can make." This smile does succeed even if it gets lost in the pressure of the next few words, under the nudging reminders of what, exactly, it is that Seth has been through. "The fact that you're still here and, and chose to work past that regardless is incredibly admirable."
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Seth doesn't feel it. Perhaps Daniel believes it, he certainly sounds like he does, but Seth has trouble seeing anything particularly admirable in it. He did it because he had no other option. How could it have been a difficult choice to make if it was the only one he could make?
Still, he doesn't argue against it. Even if it doesn't ring true, it's touching to hear that Daniel thinks so much of him, that he sees worth where Seth doesn't.
"I thought you knew," he replies instead, rather than even try to address what Daniel said. "I thought, a week ago, when we talked about it..." He trails off, not sure exactly how to finish.
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Dreams here aren't typical, however, and Daniel really should have picked up on that. And it makes the role he'd had to play in that one all the more disconcerting. Had that been Seth's subconscious, casting him in a role he felt fit best? The thought leaves an immediate chill. He figured Seth had picked up on his distaste for the part he'd been given to play, how he'd hated every second of it.
"I wish I'd gotten you out sooner - in there," he mutters, completely pointlessly. "Even if it was a dream, you - shouldn't have had to relive as much as you did."
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He gets that Daniel wants to help, but sometimes you just can't. At least not directly. Just having Daniel as a friend has already made Seth's life a lot better. That simply has to be enough.
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"You know, um." The frown flickers as he contemplates his coffee. "Dreams and, and memories are something I have some, uh, experience in navigating. After Ascending it was just something I - had to get better at. So if you, you know."
It's a belated offer, and it's regarding an extremely inexact science that Daniel has so little of a grasp over. The dreams here are nothing like any of the subconscious memories of his Ascension, and he has no idea if any amount of meditation would have an effect on control of the dream environment.
"I don't know how much it'd help. Or if it'd help at all, really." A vague disclaimer for an equally vague offer, punctuated by a tiny shrug.
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"But I do appreciate your help," he adds after a moment, because it bears saying. He hopes it's implied, that he values their friendship, and how Daniel tries looking out for him. But seeing as Daniel just thought the best idea would be to simply stop sticking his nose in, it's probably worth letting him know.
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He realigns himself, eyes training on Seth with their fervently sympathetic, blazingly curious look.
"You're not obligated to talk about anything," Daniel says evenly, the caffeine having smoothed away his nervous energy. "It's not a question of owing explanations. But if discussing it would help you process it, well - you probably know the option is always, yeah."
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"I know," he answers with a smile, small but genuine this time. And if there's anyone he thinks he could actually talk about it at length with, it's definitely Daniel. Gabe has always been there for him, and him and Johnny are definitely supportive, but they're generally not the kind of people Seth feels comfortable laying his heart open to. Not that Seth ever feels too comfortable doing that. But Daniel's intense understanding and sympathy helps.
"I'm just...," he starts, frowning a little at his coffee, mostly thoughtful. "Not sure what to say, you know? I don't, generally, talk about myself that much." He takes another sip, considering. His reticence usually serves him decently, but not when he actually wants Daniel to know stuff about him. "How about this. Ask me a question. Not just about my time there, but anything. If I don't want to talk about it, I'll let you know."
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He takes a prolonged drink of his coffee as he considers the offer, debates the intricacies, bats around a possible conclusion.
"All right," he says, rubbing at his chin with the back of one hand, "I say we spring for equal exchange here. I think if you're going to allow me interrogative freedom it's only fair that I give you the same." Daniel knows he's dodged too many questions as of late, choosing instead to define himself by his proclivity for consolation and the reach toward others. "The questions can go both ways. Sound fair?"
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He scratches at the back of his neck pensively, considering the best initiating angle. The weight of the prior subject matter is still a little too dense, a little too easily accessed, something that needs to be built toward with gradual intent. Better to start small and simple and easy.
"So, um, early life?" A safely neutral, potentially personal beginning point. "Family, childhood, etcetera?" Daniel grimaces fractionally and again resorts to coffee's stabilizing influence. "Er, too broad?"
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"Manchester, born in '84. No siblings. Dad kind of left when I was a boy, and me mam worked two jobs, so mostly it was just me in our tiny council flat," he summarises, fiddling with his coffee mug. Daniel knows some of this, but maybe Seth would just like him to actually hear it from him, rather than written on a piece of paper, even if that piece of paper was created by his mind.
"At least she had a job. Many people didn't back then. Got better as I got older though. Great music scene," he continues, gesturing at his growing collection. "Was never much for academia, dropped out when I was seventeen. Moved down to London when I was twenty-two. 's about it, really."
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"And did you - no, sorry, it's your turn." Daniel ducks his head slightly in muted, mortified acknowledgement of his error.
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Neat. He cringes at that inane, thoroughly non-descriptive adjective. Excellent word choice there.
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"Neat, huh? Name two popular bands from Manchester in the last fifty years," he challenges, still grinning.
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But then Daniel grins back as he lifts his mug again, shaking his head sheepishly. "I don't think I can actually answer any music trivia that doesn't predate the seventeen hundreds in some way. A significant gap in my experiences as a human being, I know."
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"Anyway, here," he says, returning to the couch and tossing his mp3 player into Daniel's lap and sitting down again. "Educate yourself." He's pretty sure he doesn't have anything embarrassing on there.
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If it's one thing Daniel enjoys, it's poking at things until they start yielding answers. He might not be technologically brilliant but if he can handle alien technology without triggering a global catastrophe (well, usually), then he can figure out how to work - this. In due time, that is.
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