Caleb Michaels (
greatamazingfeelingsboy) wrote2020-02-09 11:00 am
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Sunday mornings are a good, quiet time to go for a run. He's even got a halfway decent route mapped out. He jogs from Candlewood, straight down Mulholland, and once he hits the park entrance, he grabs a path and runs. He alternates his speed as he goes, and occasionally even dodges into the trees to get some different terrain under his feet.
He's slowed again to a jog when he feels familiar emotions, and he slows, then follows them to their source. Daniel Arlington is jogging ahead of him, and Caleb picks up his speed to catch up.
"Oh, hey," he says. He's smiling, because even as he draws closer he can feel that something's different. Daniel isn't upset or disappointed. He's happy. He's delighted, under the focus that usually comes with running for exercise's sake.
It's a far cry from how he'd looked when he'd approached Daniel that day in the museum. Caleb is wearing jogging sweats and a hoodie, face pink from the chill, but his eyes are lit up, grin growing the longer he's standing next to him.
He's slowed again to a jog when he feels familiar emotions, and he slows, then follows them to their source. Daniel Arlington is jogging ahead of him, and Caleb picks up his speed to catch up.
"Oh, hey," he says. He's smiling, because even as he draws closer he can feel that something's different. Daniel isn't upset or disappointed. He's happy. He's delighted, under the focus that usually comes with running for exercise's sake.
It's a far cry from how he'd looked when he'd approached Daniel that day in the museum. Caleb is wearing jogging sweats and a hoodie, face pink from the chill, but his eyes are lit up, grin growing the longer he's standing next to him.
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It sounds violent when he says it like that, and while it can be, it isn't always. Sometimes it's a slow swell, like filling a water balloon to its capacity and then beyond. But he hasn't burst yet. Not that way, anyway.
"Sometimes, I just have to remove myself, like, from the situation," he continues. "If I want to go to a party, I have to make time to be alone. Tea helps. I drink a lot of herbal tea."
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"Right," he says, the word leaving in a bit of a huff as they keep running. "You'd mentioned the tea, before."
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Darlington knows that trying not to think about things is the only sure way of bringing them to mind; ignoring them, choosing not to turn down the dark hall in which they live, will only bring them out into the light. He doesn't intend to think about the glacial distance between the lonely boy he had once been and his self-interested parents who'd barely been worthy of the term, nor the way his grandfather had molded and shaped him in a way that Darlington knew he had to think of as love--for to question it as anything else is something he's still unable to do. But he does think of it, wondering if only for a moment whether an ability like Caleb's might have been more of a curse to him than a boon.
As with so much of the uncanny, he wants to know the answer--and as with some of the things he's learned, he's not sure the reveal of it would please him if he did.
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He lets them run on in silence for a few more strides, until they're around another bend in the trail, before he speaks again. "I didn't have much in the way of family, growing up," he says. "Even less, after the age of fifteen. For a moment I wondered whether having a...talent like yours might've made things better. Or worse." The honesty of it surprises him, but somehow he feels almost better for having said it.
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"You can just tell me you don't want to talk about it," he says. "Just because I can feel it doesn't mean I'm, like, entitled to know."
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What Caleb says is kindly meant, though, and he knows it. "I do appreciate that, Caleb," he says. "If ever there's something I could use a listening ear on, you'll be one of the first people I call." Darlington smiles, genuine and grateful. "I already know you give sound advice."
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Darlington grins, rolling his eyes. "Along with too many books and too few friends my own age growing up, maybe."
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Darlington laughs, rolling one shoulder in a shrug. "As I said, too few friends, too much time."
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Maybe he should turn back before too much longer.
"Were you a runner back home?" he asks after a minute, trying to readjust their conversation. "Or just something you picked up thanks to Darrow?"
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He shrugs. At first, it had been an escape from the Home, so he could clear his head before school, or at night with the hope that people would be sleeping when he got back.
It never worked, of course.
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He trails off, already expecting Caleb to pick up on another, brighter twinge of nostalgia as he thinks of the way he'd run all over New Haven, how he'd mapped the city he loved with every footfall: from East Rock to the train station or the now-vanished Coliseum; the trails and bridges of Edgerton Park and the crisscrossing paths of the New Haven Green. His adoration of the place was deep and devoted even now, separated as he is from everything he'd once known as familiar.
"Yeah, it's a good way to spend the time."
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It's only belatedly that he realizes he hasn't answered him, so after a moment he clears his throat.
"Jesus, six miles. That's pretty impressive."
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Darlington doesn't say anything, just lets him process in whatever way he requires, and when Caleb speaks again, he nods. "It's a habit now, but you're not wrong."
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He thinks a moment. "It looked like you were filtering things, just then. Sifting through whatever you were getting from me."
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Some feelings can sort of overwhelm him if he doesn't understand the feeling. Stress can do that, and so can anger, if he doesn't understand the source. Fear does it, too.
"Nostalgia is just... so weird, though, like. I know what it is. And I usually know why someone's feeling it. But it's so weird, right? Because it's happy and sad. It's bitter, but it's also, like, reassuring. It's this sorta perfect contradiction of feelings, and it never makes sense the first time I feel it."
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