Layla Miller (
butterflyfactor) wrote2010-03-21 01:54 am
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Layla was on the porch, sitting cross legged and straight backed in the chair, reading a travel book in Portuguese. She looked totally at ease and pleased with life. This was because for the first time in a long time, she knew something someone else didn't know, that actually applied to the island.
It felt good.
It felt good.
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"You know this was actually your idea," she told him as they walked.
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"To tell you what your ideas are."
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"Though you weren't suggesting it for yourself, at the time. Or even directly. Still."
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"Still," he echoed, and the only reason he didn't turn around right then and there was that she'd outright asked him to trust her. He was already starting to wonder if he was going to regret that choice.
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She had to admit, the ocean looked pretty beautiful at night. She turned back to look at him.
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It's not that I'm afraid of water. I probably should be, all things considered, but I'm not. It's what it reminds me of that's terrifying, the sense of helplessness and futility that drove me to jump off that cliff in the first place, and revisiting those feelings -- revisiting that day -- strikes me as wholly unnecessary, like I'm asking for trouble. I won't deny that the view is gorgeous, but I can appreciate it just as well from afar.
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She had slipped her hands into the back pockets of her jeans and stood still, making no move toward the water, watching Jamie wholly without judgment but with a certain air of expectation.
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"I'm not going in there."
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"Why are you doing this?" he asked, looking up at her with a mildly plaintive expression, as he let his hand fall back to his side.
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He's already starting to. That's what the investigation is- it's dealing with the sense of futility, of having no control. And it's a good start but when he reaches the end of it, he'll be totally without answers. I don't have even the slightest doubt of that. But this isn't a dead end, this isn't some ghost for him to chase. This is real, and it will help.
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"I know stuff."
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"Actually. Instead of a quip about your clothing."
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"It's not because I can't swim."
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"...So you don't trust me, then."
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She hated this 'putting herself out there' shit. It was extremely taxing, without knowing each step of the outcome for sure. But if she had to, she had to. She walked over to stop in front of him, less than a foot away.
"But this is an important part of who you are and where you're going, and you won't talk to me about it. So what should I think?"
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