"Like I said, she wasn't pleased I was leading the Golden Path monkey down to get interrogated," he tells him. "And then she started asking questions about it. Telling me it wasn't right. Blah blah blah."
He rolls his eyes. "It was bullshit. But...at the same time...I knew it wasn't."
He throws his hands up in the air slightly. "Fuck," he mutters. "Just tell me the answer, Lark. Tell me why I can't just sit around and be angry all the time."
But Pagan also gets a real answer. "And because anger holds you to the past. If you ever plan to be anything more than what you are right now, you can't be angry all the time. Which isn't the same as forgiving. It's not the same as never being angry."
"It seems so simple as all that, doesn't it? But as much as I fucking hated that flood, I'd do it a thousand times over if I could just - have that back." And he only got that one memory of Ishwari that wasn't fucked.
If Alec had never returned here, if Alec had died like he's nearly done so many times, Lark knows he'd be saying exactly the same thing.
"We're going to save them," he says. "And if you ever do change your mind about being with them, I'll redraw the terms of the deal." A hesitation. "It matters to me that you come out of this place happier than you came in, Pagan."
"Then I don't think you're as fucked as you feel right now." He doesn't point out that memories will spin anyone around, or that he'd worry if Pagan wasn't badly affected by it.
"I can," but Lark isn't. "Anita likes you, doesn't she?" He doesn't mean romantically. He's just hoping Pagan's circle of friends is expanding, and continues to include decent people who won't use him.
"It's hard to find someone who will risk themselves to pull someone off a cliff."
He purses his lips, thinking, then: "I'm saying Anita is probably not someone you need to be afraid to talk to. If not about your past, then about where you are now."
"And have someone else fucking hate me?" he mutters. "No thank you, Lark. I have enough people I've ruined by being - me. I'd rather not make it another."
"Again, I have to ask, where are we going with this, Lark? Are you trying to get me to make new friends? Anita and I have been friends for a while," he says gently.
"You have. I'm just trying to understand what it means that you would rather jump off a cliff to wake yourself up than tell that friend something. I know what it would mean if I did it, and I'm not saying I wouldn't do it--there are plenty of people I don't want nosing around my past. But you aren't me and I don't want to put my motives in your mouth."
He tenses slightly. "Because I wanted it to be over with," he tells him. "Because I wanted it to end. What is so difficult to understand about that?"
And certainly not because she had been making good points. Certainly not because she had a point. Not because he was starting to feel like rethinking it.
Lark just watches him evenly, knowing that for the defensive answer it is. that's not all there is to it, and he's content to wait to see what Pagan says next.
"Well, maybe I am un-asking you now," he tells him. "Look, I know where this is going to lead, Lark. I know where this path goes, and I don't want to travel it."
Suddenly, he really wants a drink. He settles for just looking annoyed.
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He rolls his eyes. "It was bullshit. But...at the same time...I knew it wasn't."
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"Why wasn't it right?" he murmurs, because it's the first time Pagan has ever expressed something like this.
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But Pagan also gets a real answer. "And because anger holds you to the past. If you ever plan to be anything more than what you are right now, you can't be angry all the time. Which isn't the same as forgiving. It's not the same as never being angry."
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"We're going to save them," he says. "And if you ever do change your mind about being with them, I'll redraw the terms of the deal." A hesitation. "It matters to me that you come out of this place happier than you came in, Pagan."
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He puts his hands over his face. "Just fucked."
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"It's hard to find someone who will risk themselves to pull someone off a cliff."
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He rubs the back of his neck. "Lark, where are you going with this."
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"Did that memory, that dream, change how you see her? Her objection to Paul, her willingness to grab you?"
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Which is another affirmation of his own nonsense.
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And certainly not because she had been making good points. Certainly not because she had a point. Not because he was starting to feel like rethinking it.
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Suddenly, he really wants a drink. He settles for just looking annoyed.
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