A Long Trip Home
Nov. 2nd, 2009 03:38 pmThe door is two yards away but I can't move from the top of the stairs. It's been months, four or so, since I've been here, in this spot. Gone were the days of trudging up the stairs with my satchel on the way home from work because my building's landlords refused to fix the elevators properly. Gone too was the pleasure I had of returning to this apartment I paid for with my own money and not from my trust fund. I donated all of that to charity the moment I turned twenty-five and finished paying off my loans to school. It was two years ago. It feels like forever.
I'm not the same man I had been. I'm not a child anymore. At least, I want to think that.
I'm still clutching the photograph of my brother and I in our tuxedos. There's a smudge on it from my thumb and full of creases. I've not let it go since I opened that box containing everything that I am. Everything I was. I left Ireland without looking back. There was, there is only one thing on my mind. Nathan.
Nathan.
Nathan.
I know he's here. I've always felt a connection to him. Mohinder Suresh called it part of my empathy, to feel things like that. Funny to be so empathically linked to someone I spent my whole life pining for, who has always had a life to live without me. He's never had time for me. Never.
"Just walk, Peter," I whisper to myself as I move to a door I have not touched in a long time. I swallow. And knock. I know he's in here without knowing it. I almost lose the nerve to knock. Please answer, Nathan. Please.
I'm not the same man I had been. I'm not a child anymore. At least, I want to think that.
I'm still clutching the photograph of my brother and I in our tuxedos. There's a smudge on it from my thumb and full of creases. I've not let it go since I opened that box containing everything that I am. Everything I was. I left Ireland without looking back. There was, there is only one thing on my mind. Nathan.
Nathan.
Nathan.
I know he's here. I've always felt a connection to him. Mohinder Suresh called it part of my empathy, to feel things like that. Funny to be so empathically linked to someone I spent my whole life pining for, who has always had a life to live without me. He's never had time for me. Never.
"Just walk, Peter," I whisper to myself as I move to a door I have not touched in a long time. I swallow. And knock. I know he's in here without knowing it. I almost lose the nerve to knock. Please answer, Nathan. Please.
Re: Peter's flashback
Date: 2009-12-17 06:17 am (UTC)You've corrupted him. You've ruined him. You're going to hell, Nathan Petrelli, and you're taking Peter with you.
I almost stop at these thoughts. They fill my heart with shame and guilt, even as my body is still enjoying the physical sensations.
No...that's not true. It's all in your head, Nathan. You love him, that's why you're doing this. Show him how much you love him.
I try not to cry myself as I reassure him of that very truth. "I love you, Peter, love you so much..." I wipe the tears from his face as he moans my name, as he finally starts to move with me, to enjoy this, and soon, I find a slow, deep rhythm that sends us together towards our peak.
I'll worry about Hell later. Being here with my brother, kissing him, thrusting inside him, hearing his soft cries, feeling his muscles clench around me in orgasm, this is heaven as far as I'm concerned. It's almost like we're flying, even if we've lost our wings.
With a strangled moan into his shoulder, just before he finishes, I come too, everything inside me rushing forth, into my little brother's body. Peter and I fall back to earth together, both of us shaking and clinging to each other.
There's an incredibly long moment of silence, and then I hear it. Rain slaps against the windows relentlessly, and I just know those are God's tears.
He is crying for us, the lost children that we are. We've committed a most unforgivable sin.
no subject
Date: 2009-12-17 01:11 pm (UTC)It was such a vivid flash of thought, and I know I wasn't making it up. I didn't hallucinate. I remember the next day limping downstairs and blaming it on trying to slide down the banister again. I remember trying hard not to look at Nathan across the table at breakfast as he carried on about his girlfriend, his work, his degree.
I frown lightly now, reaching up to stroke Nathan's hair. I wonder if he knows that two days ago was not our first time. I can't bring himself to mention it.
Instead I kiss his temple. "Tomorrow," I whisper, "she'll love you again."
I think I can do that.