He shrugs, then takes another moment to turn over in his mind what the differences actually are. What roots they have.
"It's common knowledge here that I graduated. That I needed to in order to get out. That none of us are from here. So I can be more honest about what I am without worrying it's going to start something in a place I want to stay."
"I'd wager there are people who either won't believe you if you tell them anything you can do," and he doubts Alec will; neither of them are the type to show their hand, even if someone has seen a few cards. "And others who will test it. Which I would buy tickets to watch."
"Well, you're in luck: you have season tickets," Alec replies drily, because whatever advantages he can glean from being here - and he will; he always will - he would never have come back here if not for Lark. The moment Lark leaves, Alec is gone, too.
"But it's just... like it fits better in a way, almost. Even though it doesn't. Not really."
"Not having to grovel or be someone you aren't goes a long way, no matter where you are." Or how well trained or talented you are at it, he thinks.
"Though I'm a hypocrite for saying that, I know. I'm glad that you're able to not give a fuck here. I meant what I said when I told you I don't want you to stop being Alec Tennant just to appease a few passengers."
It hits a strange chord with him, hearing that name here in a place where he was first and foremost Alec McDowell. Where he was, in a way, more honest than he has ever been in Los Angeles.
Or maybe just different, he thinks as he looks at the warm gleam of his wedding band. Because he is Alec Tennant, too, even if it's only one of a pack of cards he plays on an Earth where he is unique among all things.
Instead of answering, he leans close enough to kiss Lark, lightly.
Lark kisses him back, his thumb stroking Alec's hand and brushing the wedding band.
"Does different mean alone, to you?" he wonders, something he's wondered off and on over the years. Obviously Lark is with him in every way he can be, but he knows full well that they're different species, that there are things they don't--can't--understand without experiencing.
Alone is a complicated concept for Alec, who has lived in the kind of isolation that drives people mad, who has been separate for most of his life even while surrounded by other transgenics, other inmates, other soldiers and monsters. He grew up with a unit. He trained with soldiers. He worked with other passengers. Now he lives with pack and he is as different now as he's always been.
"Sometimes," he admits. "It always has before. I didn't see a reason why it would change."
Lark hasn't felt like he belonged anywhere, except for one watercolor dream where he was a pup. He is convinced now that it was simply Violet's influence and the heady mania of, for the first time in his life, having friends who weren't simply after his influence. Nothing lasting, nothing real. Everything since then has been a useful bit of maneuvering with glimmers of real affection, like flecks of glitter in a strobe light.
Except this.
And he has no idea how to impart that to Alec, or if he has, or if he can.
This is, honestly, why he said what he'd said: he had never expected how he felt to change, but it has, at least enough to show him what he's been missing. So much of life with Lark is like that: showing him things he had no idea he'd been without and, now that he knows, never wants to be without again.
In light of that, this is a loaded question as well - or at least a complicated one.
"Not enough to change anything right now," is what he leads with, in case that's in question. "Enough that sometimes... I do wish things could have gone another way here or there."
'Right now' he says, which is what they always say. They almost never speak in absolutes, even if they might think them in the briefest moments when they're most relaxed. Lark does impossible things but he knows those moments are both precious and as childish as looking at clouds and seeing castles.
"Which things?" He might know the answers but he's thinking, he's scheming, he's hoping.
Alec knows his husband, knows how his mind is always working; he gives him a mild look for the question, but that's not what makes him hesitate before answering.
"That Seattle could have been a fight we could win. Shila." Those two items alone are a pretty big ask, and the easiest to summarize.
Lark still thinks Seattle could have been won, but that's only if there were better resources. More help for the transgenics, more strategy in managing the humans. More, more, more of so many things that wouldn't be worth chasing. He doesn't dwell on it because Alec doesn't, and because if he does...well they've seen what he does with an idea that won't let go.
"What was she like before?" He asks instead, tapping a faint promise that he doesn't expect a full answer. Or one at all, if Alec doesn't want to give it. But he's always wondered; Alec's comments on her are rare and little more than a few words.
"Before...?" he wonders, trying to pin down what the question actually is. But of course, there's really only one answer: "Before PsyOps reconditioned her?"
There was no before that, after all. She was always a child placed into an unwinnable fight, who did her very best to win it anyway.
"Stubborn. Whip smart, and that's coming from me," he starts, slowly, like he had with Evan. "Serious. She... they nominated the leaders very early on, and in the home units, it never changed. She was responsible for the performance of all of us, individually and as a group, and she never stopped thinking about that."
Lark met Ben, but barely beyond a nod here and there. He never spoke to him, but he'd watched the network and he'd paid more attention as a new inmate than he ever has in his life. He knows a sketch of Ben. He knows all the ways Ben was not--would never be--like Alec.
The more he hears the more his suspicions are confirmed: that Alec, his Alec, is the only one like him. That no other transgenic soaks up life the way Alec does, that no other transgenic loves and seethes the way Alec does. Perhaps if they did, Lark would have pushed harder to know why Alec has let them lie where they died.
But the more he hears the more he doubts they could adapt to life outside their missions. How could they? How could Shila, who had responsibility chained around her neck?
But even so. He can picture them and knows what he pictures wouldn't resemble their real faces, but with every detail Alec gives him they take on new dimension. So even so. "I wish sometimes I could have met them."
This is where Alec rolls over onto his back again, though he doesn't take his hand back; he leaves it where it is, fingers still loosely tangled with Lark's. He focuses on keeping his breathing even while he tries to picture that: bringing Evan home to see the motorcycles, Teek dangling his feet in the pond water and letting the fish nibble on his toes, Shila and Lark talking over coffee.
He can't quite do it, but he tries for a long, long time before he says, "I wish you could have too. I wish there'd been anything to do for her."
"Even here, you don't think there could be?" He asks, but he asks it carefully. He can hear Alec breathing, he knows how close to old tripwires they are. They don't scare him the way they once did; now it's just a matter of not wanting to cause Alec pain.
And indeed, they're still there: still buried deep enough that it takes work to find them but real enough that Alec feels his throat close when he opens his mouth to answer, completely unbidden. He feels heat behind his eyes and closes them.
"Where do I stop, Lark?" he asks, quiet, pained. "If I start, how long do I keep it up? Whose choices do I undo and whose do I respect?"
Lark is both selfish and calculating; they both are, but it's deeper in Lark. So he's quiet, thinking about that and trying not to make it fit his own terms.
"I know," he says, because he does. It's a dam that would never stop flowing if it cracked in the wrong place. "But what choices did she have a chance to make?"
This is always a strange concept, too, when it comes to transgenics: choice. Alec in particular is very, very discerning about how he defines choices and usually much different from everyone else. This is where he pulls away, where he rolls over to his feet because it's old, old habit and almost reflex to put distance between himself and everyone, everything, when this particular sore spot is touched.
"Plenty," he says, firmly, almost snaps. "I know it doesn't seem like much to anyone else, but the small choices we could make on a day to day basis? To do one more push up or trust it was good enough? To address a CO or stand silent? To... save one unitmate -" Brother, sister. "- or save the rest? Those mattered."
Lark watches him, not moving closer, not moving away. One hand rests on his stomach; he doesn't think to move the other away from where Alec left it.
"I know," he says. He was never in the hell Alec was, but he had his mind warped. He knows he never would have broken free without the tiniest victories first. He almost asks something and then doesn't.
"We followed a script, we toed a line, but each of us chose how to do it. Each of us chose when enough was enough. And I don't know what choices Shila made that landed her in that chair - maybe someone else sold her out, maybe it was the only way she could see to make it to the next day, maybe she decided she was done halfway through a routine session." He has momentum now - the old anger, the one that never really cools, never really fades - and it's easy to let it have him.
"She taught us that. She never let us be victims. Why would I take that from her?"
He lets Alec speak, listening to the words as much as to the undertow in them. "You're right," he says, believing it. The reasons behind Alec's choice always made Lark curious, but now that he has them he can't imagine arguing against them.
He looks away then, absently touching the ring on his finger. It isn't the real one but it's a habit at this point. "I'm glad you had her to teach you that."
Alec can keep his anger going indefinitely; he can fan his temper to a searing breaking point, he can hold it just so for as long as he feels he needs it to keep going, as long as he needs its protection.
None of that is this; this is Lark, who does not rise to challenge him or dismiss him, whom he does not need to protect himself from anymore. So instead his anger is just that - just anger because it's always there, just frustration at this entire unsavory situation - and he swallows it down with effort, to keep himself here, keep himself thinking, keep himself listening. He nods.
Then he sighs, and reaches up to rub the corners of his eyes, to pinch the bridge of his nose. "That doesn't make it any easier. Not knowing," he admits, clarifies. "But because I don't know, I have to go with what she taught us. Right?"
"I think," Lark says slowly, considering his words, the delicate situation. "That risking breaking a choice she made is worse than anything else you could do. Worse than not knowing. ...But that doesn't mean not knowing isn't its own sort of hell."
There are things he knows he can never help Alec recover from, and that those things sometimes trip them up even now. But again: knowing that doesn't mean that watching Alec struggle isn't hell.
It's not a good answer, but it's the same answer Alec has already come to; it's the only one he can see as satisfying, as well as any one answer can, every need the choice presents. But that's the thing about choosing to do nothing: it's a choice that must be made, over and over, and that dies the moment a different one is made.
He squeezes at the corner of his eyes one more time, and forces himself to sit down on the edge of the bed. He doesn't apologize - years into their relationship, even when he can admit he's in the wrong for something, he so rarely apologizes - but he does give that much ground anyway.
"That's how I feel, too. That's what I know - but I still wish it were different." This time he does not offer the qualifier of sometimes.
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"It's common knowledge here that I graduated. That I needed to in order to get out. That none of us are from here. So I can be more honest about what I am without worrying it's going to start something in a place I want to stay."
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"But it's just... like it fits better in a way, almost. Even though it doesn't. Not really."
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"Though I'm a hypocrite for saying that, I know. I'm glad that you're able to not give a fuck here. I meant what I said when I told you I don't want you to stop being Alec Tennant just to appease a few passengers."
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Or maybe just different, he thinks as he looks at the warm gleam of his wedding band. Because he is Alec Tennant, too, even if it's only one of a pack of cards he plays on an Earth where he is unique among all things.
Instead of answering, he leans close enough to kiss Lark, lightly.
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"Does different mean alone, to you?" he wonders, something he's wondered off and on over the years. Obviously Lark is with him in every way he can be, but he knows full well that they're different species, that there are things they don't--can't--understand without experiencing.
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"Sometimes," he admits. "It always has before. I didn't see a reason why it would change."
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Except this.
And he has no idea how to impart that to Alec, or if he has, or if he can.
"How much does that bother you?"
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In light of that, this is a loaded question as well - or at least a complicated one.
"Not enough to change anything right now," is what he leads with, in case that's in question. "Enough that sometimes... I do wish things could have gone another way here or there."
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"Which things?" He might know the answers but he's thinking, he's scheming, he's hoping.
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"That Seattle could have been a fight we could win. Shila." Those two items alone are a pretty big ask, and the easiest to summarize.
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"What was she like before?" He asks instead, tapping a faint promise that he doesn't expect a full answer. Or one at all, if Alec doesn't want to give it. But he's always wondered; Alec's comments on her are rare and little more than a few words.
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There was no before that, after all. She was always a child placed into an unwinnable fight, who did her very best to win it anyway.
"Stubborn. Whip smart, and that's coming from me," he starts, slowly, like he had with Evan. "Serious. She... they nominated the leaders very early on, and in the home units, it never changed. She was responsible for the performance of all of us, individually and as a group, and she never stopped thinking about that."
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The more he hears the more his suspicions are confirmed: that Alec, his Alec, is the only one like him. That no other transgenic soaks up life the way Alec does, that no other transgenic loves and seethes the way Alec does. Perhaps if they did, Lark would have pushed harder to know why Alec has let them lie where they died.
But the more he hears the more he doubts they could adapt to life outside their missions. How could they? How could Shila, who had responsibility chained around her neck?
But even so. He can picture them and knows what he pictures wouldn't resemble their real faces, but with every detail Alec gives him they take on new dimension. So even so. "I wish sometimes I could have met them."
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He can't quite do it, but he tries for a long, long time before he says, "I wish you could have too. I wish there'd been anything to do for her."
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"Where do I stop, Lark?" he asks, quiet, pained. "If I start, how long do I keep it up? Whose choices do I undo and whose do I respect?"
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"I know," he says, because he does. It's a dam that would never stop flowing if it cracked in the wrong place. "But what choices did she have a chance to make?"
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"Plenty," he says, firmly, almost snaps. "I know it doesn't seem like much to anyone else, but the small choices we could make on a day to day basis? To do one more push up or trust it was good enough? To address a CO or stand silent? To... save one unitmate -" Brother, sister. "- or save the rest? Those mattered."
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"I know," he says. He was never in the hell Alec was, but he had his mind warped. He knows he never would have broken free without the tiniest victories first. He almost asks something and then doesn't.
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"She taught us that. She never let us be victims. Why would I take that from her?"
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He looks away then, absently touching the ring on his finger. It isn't the real one but it's a habit at this point. "I'm glad you had her to teach you that."
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None of that is this; this is Lark, who does not rise to challenge him or dismiss him, whom he does not need to protect himself from anymore. So instead his anger is just that - just anger because it's always there, just frustration at this entire unsavory situation - and he swallows it down with effort, to keep himself here, keep himself thinking, keep himself listening. He nods.
Then he sighs, and reaches up to rub the corners of his eyes, to pinch the bridge of his nose. "That doesn't make it any easier. Not knowing," he admits, clarifies. "But because I don't know, I have to go with what she taught us. Right?"
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There are things he knows he can never help Alec recover from, and that those things sometimes trip them up even now. But again: knowing that doesn't mean that watching Alec struggle isn't hell.
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He squeezes at the corner of his eyes one more time, and forces himself to sit down on the edge of the bed. He doesn't apologize - years into their relationship, even when he can admit he's in the wrong for something, he so rarely apologizes - but he does give that much ground anyway.
"That's how I feel, too. That's what I know - but I still wish it were different." This time he does not offer the qualifier of sometimes.
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