[ Jean remembers, briefly, seeing Kurt and Logan through the Phoenix's eyes. Remembers hearing them and feeling their fear, their pain. Her own fear had amused this... thing in her. She had grabbed it - as much as one can grab a being in their mind - and pulled it down with her. Down and down, until there was nothing but darkness.
Her mindscape has changed since she left Earth. There's an ocean now. Blue and vast. Islands of green sprinkled here and there. A sky just as blue with violets streaked in it with stars and several moons. It's what she's known for over a year now. And it's where she took refuge from the other being in her mind.
What she thought was her power.
She stays under than ocean, sleeping in the dark silence. There's nothing there to hurt her. Though she thinks she heard Charles. Logan. Other voices she didn't recognize. They were all muffled and she couldn't make herself reach out. Or even open her eyes. Not until she felt her body finally move out of the water.
She's washed up onto the shore, the sand solid and sinking under her. Jean opens her eyes and hears the waves. She can see the sky above her, stars twinkling as the sun is setting and tries to take in a deep breath. It's difficult at first. She starts coughing until she can feel air start to move past her lips. Her actual eyes open then, the world too bright and blurry. She squeezes them shut, trying to block it out. ]
[When he first feels her stir, his mind writes it off as part of a dream. It's a strange and vivid sort, the kind that feels real when they're so close to the waking world and the easiest forgotten in the sudden haze of consciousness, where walking around the house set to the tune of confused Iron Maiden from god-only-knows-where seems perfectly reasonable. But even in this setting that's already off from the world he otherwise knows, something shifts. A creaking door in the distance opening of its own accord, light growing brighter, all sound cutting off with an abrupt stop. It's enough to pull him out of this aimless vision with a start to the much more realistic tune of Jean's coughing.
He's immediately alert then, metaphorically (but not quite mentally) kicking himself for having fallen asleep at all. The hand around hers tightens a fraction, squeezing.]
Jean?
[It's soft, extremely tired, and desperate for confirmation to an almost-frightening degree. If there is a god, this won't be a hallucination.]
[ Her eyes are watering from the lights and she can't really keep them open. Her mouth and tongue feel so dry, her throat sore. All she can do is make a weak noise in response to the voice she knows so well.
She tries to reach out to him mentally but it... hurts. Makes her temples throb painfully, causing her whole body to jerk. ]
[Initially, the response doesn't quite worry him as much as it does simply pile onto that innate sense of sadness that seems to invade far too much in all of their lives. It's heartening that he's getting one at all, and that she seems to recognize him is even better.
It's when she starts straining that even the barest hint of optimism sinks into his stomach right along with the heart that's been there for days now. He reaches out, pulling her to face him, fingers carding through her hair in some measly effort to calm her down. At first, he tries to push back mentally, but that Jean, stop is met with walled resistance, thrown up haphazardly, it seems, upon her waking, when he's seen nothing of the sort to now.]
Jean--stop pushing it. [He can't know what this looks like from the other side; he can only see now what it does to her on the outside, and it's not any more reassuring. He's half expecting the walls to start smoldering again.]
It's alright. It's alright. [Even if he knows it damn well isn't.] I'm not going anywhere, just stop pushing. Let go.
[ She coughs more, a strained whimper leaving her as the pain seems to throb through her head. She can feel his hands and tears are dripping past her cheeks for more than one reason. She can barely open her eyes and her voice is rough when she finally pushes the words out: ]
Wha-at... hap-pened? Why...?
[ It cracks painfully from disuse and she's trying to reach blindly for him with one hand. ]
[It hurts just to hear her like this, and he can only imagine--literally, there is no getting into her head like this--how everything else feels. The indignation attached to his fear for her safety all but dies in the face of his heart breaking.
He's responsible for this. For her, particularly. If he'd been paying attention, if he'd acted quicker, if--this shouldn't have happened. God, this never should have happened.
His breath gets stuck in his throat for a moment in the dawning of that realization, of how much he should have been able to prevent all of this pain, and his reply takes a long moment to follow. It's only with a shuddered breath, clearly is nothing at all akin to a sob, that he's finally able to answer.]
Jean, it's alright [it isn't], you're in the medical bay. You've...been asleep for some time, your body is just trying to adjust.
[He finds her reaching out and takes her hand in his own. This is the least he can do, and it's nowhere near enough. He'd promised he wouldn't go anywhere, and this is where that promise ends up?]
[ She grips his hand as tightly as she can manage and tries to calm down, letting the tears come along with the tremors. None of this makes any sense and she wants answers. But first things first: she needs to get this pain to stop so she can concentrate. ]
[Oh Jean, what were you thinking? The silent, unspoken, saddened admonishment isn't projected, and it wouldn't do any good even if doing do would actually have an effect. But he can't hold that worry in any more than he can connect with her in a way that either of them are used to, and so it just sits in his head, accompanied with all of that sorrow that verges on pity.]
I know. But you're only going to make it worse if you keep forcing it. Breathe.
[Buuut he's going to subtly use his free hand to call for a nurse anyway. Even with all of the monitors and equipment, painkillers can't hurt anything. He hopes.]
[ She doesn't even know now. She can't remember anything beyond what she saw on the Network; trying to look any further is met with blank space in her mind. And walls. Walls too high and solid for her to move. ]
The lights are too bright. I can't see.
[ She's not even trying to push anymore. She just wants the pain to stop. ]
[He nods quickly, more out of reflex than it is a response, and gives her a soft pat on the hand before he (reluctantly) disengages to move across the room and dim the lights--anyone else who comes in can, frankly, deal with it. It would be difficult to pick up the soft motor of his chair over the other equipment in the room, but sure enough, he comes right back.]
[ Through her eyelids, she's able to gauge the dimming in the room. Slowly, she opens her eyes -- or at least one of them. One is nearly swollen shut from the kick to the face she had received from one of the slavers. Her other eye was red-rimmed, the blue standing out even more. She blinks slowly a few times before looking over at Charles. ]
Unfortunately, I know about as much as you do. [Which isn't exactly a lie. Everyone, despite being able to readily admit they'd "made a mistake," has been thoroughly recalcitrant in providing the details of said mistake.
He inhales softly, and reaches back out for her hand. He grimaces at that expression of pain, but doesn't push it. It's a miracle she's even cognizant right now; the memories they'll figure out in time.]
From what I understand, after you all went to that-- [wretched hive? hellhole?] --outpost, you had to figure your way back out, and you ended up hurt.
[Obviously. But those are the details he has. Even with Logan's warning that he'd been able to drag them all home, everyone has been dancing around a rather large room-elephant, and it's all the more frustrating when he can't get a read on it from anyone.]
Kurt. Laura. [Both names sound a bit strangled, but he's trying his best not to radiate that lingering disappointment.] Logan brought you all back, and we've been here since.
["Okay" is a complicated, loaded word that he can't give her in perfect honesty. But they're breathing, and aware, and no one else ended up in this delightful vacation destination. It isn't wrong, either.]
They're fine. [A word even more complicated. But in the most important respect, it's correct enough.] Everyone else is home and accounted for.
[Which is apparently from the negligence apparent in his own appearance. Whoops.]
[ Jean nods slowly, relieved by the news. But it doesn't last long when the nurse enters the room and turns the lights back up. Her eyes squeezed shut against them with a groan, pain flaring behind her eyes.
The woman walks over and begins the process of checking her over, commenting that she needs a new IV and it's time for her to be given more pain meds. ]
[There's not a warm reception at the nurse's entrance and apparent lack of awareness, but if she has to change the IV, he can't quite outwardly complain about it either, no matter how much he may empathize with Jean.
And he does. He keeps a hand in her own, out of the nurse's way, a silent sort of support in the middle of that momentary intrusion.
He is not above, however, implanting the suggestion that the woman turn the lights back down on her way out. It's a little pettier than he he'd normally allow himself, but the interruption had been untimely, even if necessary. And he's working on several days of minimum sleep and maximum irritation.
It's only after the nurse leaves again that he ventures a continued conversation.]
[Except it very much isn't. He'd give a good deal to understand what had drawn her to it, or how this had all happened. He's known her enough to think her better than this kind of reckless--there must be a reason, something must have happened. But in their guilt, her friends are quiet and shamed and as willingly recalcitrant as the unwitting blocks in Jean's mind. Charles sighs quietly.]
I'm just glad you're still here.
[Any loss right now would gut him, especially those that he feels directly responsible for. Especially when they'd just come so close to reconciliation over slights he's sure he's never going to be able to make up for, "his" or not. Any loss would gut him. Losing Jean might actually be the death of him.
[ Her lips twitch, feeling a small hint of amusement but not really feeling it entirely when she responds with: ]
You're just saying that to make me feel better.
[ Because she knows it isn't "alright". None of it is. That kid on that network post, any of them going to that outpost, Jean waking up in a hospital and unable to connect to her own powers. None of it was alright. ]
[No, none of it is. But he doesn't see much point in lending more worry to something that's already concerning enough. It's a bit of self-determination wrapped up in that attempt at comfort: if they say it enough, it has to be true in some capacity. When the world starts spinning backward.]
I'm only conceding to that accusation if it's working.
[If she has, it's not something anyone has said. And even through all of the upset lecturing and guilt from the others who came out of it with her, he trusts Logan to not obscure a detail so large.
But even if that's a grand exaggeration of what had actually happened on the Outpost, the question itself is a gut punch neither of them needed. He doesn't require a connection with her mind right now to know exactly where her memories have dragged her. He may not regret having taken Jean in--not even for a day--but there will never be any way to find comfort in the circumstances that led to it.
He shakes his head, and lets out a stuttered breath.]
Jean, no. You overextended yourself and collapsed.
[To put it lightly, more so than Charles even knows right now.]
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Her mindscape has changed since she left Earth. There's an ocean now. Blue and vast. Islands of green sprinkled here and there. A sky just as blue with violets streaked in it with stars and several moons. It's what she's known for over a year now. And it's where she took refuge from the other being in her mind.
What she thought was her power.
She stays under than ocean, sleeping in the dark silence. There's nothing there to hurt her. Though she thinks she heard Charles. Logan. Other voices she didn't recognize. They were all muffled and she couldn't make herself reach out. Or even open her eyes. Not until she felt her body finally move out of the water.
She's washed up onto the shore, the sand solid and sinking under her. Jean opens her eyes and hears the waves. She can see the sky above her, stars twinkling as the sun is setting and tries to take in a deep breath. It's difficult at first. She starts coughing until she can feel air start to move past her lips. Her actual eyes open then, the world too bright and blurry. She squeezes them shut, trying to block it out. ]
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He's immediately alert then, metaphorically (but not quite mentally) kicking himself for having fallen asleep at all. The hand around hers tightens a fraction, squeezing.]
Jean?
[It's soft, extremely tired, and desperate for confirmation to an almost-frightening degree. If there is a god, this won't be a hallucination.]
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She tries to reach out to him mentally but it... hurts. Makes her temples throb painfully, causing her whole body to jerk. ]
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It's when she starts straining that even the barest hint of optimism sinks into his stomach right along with the heart that's been there for days now. He reaches out, pulling her to face him, fingers carding through her hair in some measly effort to calm her down. At first, he tries to push back mentally, but that Jean, stop is met with walled resistance, thrown up haphazardly, it seems, upon her waking, when he's seen nothing of the sort to now.]
Jean--stop pushing it. [He can't know what this looks like from the other side; he can only see now what it does to her on the outside, and it's not any more reassuring. He's half expecting the walls to start smoldering again.]
It's alright. It's alright. [Even if he knows it damn well isn't.] I'm not going anywhere, just stop pushing. Let go.
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Wha-at... hap-pened? Why...?
[ It cracks painfully from disuse and she's trying to reach blindly for him with one hand. ]
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He's responsible for this. For her, particularly. If he'd been paying attention, if he'd acted quicker, if--this shouldn't have happened. God, this never should have happened.
His breath gets stuck in his throat for a moment in the dawning of that realization, of how much he should have been able to prevent all of this pain, and his reply takes a long moment to follow. It's only with a shuddered breath, clearly is nothing at all akin to a sob, that he's finally able to answer.]
Jean, it's alright [
it isn't], you're in the medical bay. You've...been asleep for some time, your body is just trying to adjust.[He finds her reaching out and takes her hand in his own. This is the least he can do, and it's nowhere near enough. He'd promised he wouldn't go anywhere, and this is where that promise ends up?]
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My head hurts.
[ Along with her throat and face and body. ]
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I know. But you're only going to make it worse if you keep forcing it. Breathe.
[Buuut he's going to subtly use his free hand to call for a nurse anyway. Even with all of the monitors and equipment, painkillers can't hurt anything.
He hopes.]no subject
The lights are too bright. I can't see.
[ She's not even trying to push anymore. She just wants the pain to stop. ]
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Better?
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What happened?
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He inhales softly, and reaches back out for her hand. He grimaces at that expression of pain, but doesn't push it. It's a miracle she's even cognizant right now; the memories they'll figure out in time.]
From what I understand, after you all went to that-- [wretched hive? hellhole?] --outpost, you had to figure your way back out, and you ended up hurt.
[Obviously. But those are the details he has. Even with Logan's warning that he'd been able to drag them all home, everyone has been dancing around a rather large room-elephant, and it's all the more frustrating when he can't get a read on it from anyone.]
Beyond that, I don't know.
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I...I went there?
[ She looks back up at the ceiling, still trying to remember what she could. It certainly made sense but-- "after you all went". ]
Who else went there?
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Kurt. Laura. [Both names sound a bit strangled, but he's trying his best not to radiate that lingering disappointment.] Logan brought you all back, and we've been here since.
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Are they okay?
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They're fine. [A word even more complicated. But in the most important respect, it's correct enough.] Everyone else is home and accounted for.
[Which is apparently from the negligence apparent in his own appearance.
Whoops.]no subject
The woman walks over and begins the process of checking her over, commenting that she needs a new IV and it's time for her to be given more pain meds. ]
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And he does. He keeps a hand in her own, out of the nurse's way, a silent sort of support in the middle of that momentary intrusion.
He is not above, however, implanting the suggestion that the woman turn the lights back down on her way out. It's a little pettier than he he'd normally allow himself, but the interruption had been untimely, even if necessary. And he's working on several days of minimum sleep and maximum irritation.
It's only after the nurse leaves again that he ventures a continued conversation.]
You had me worried for a while there, Jean.
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I wasn't trying to. I don't even know what I did...
[ She turns her head to look back at him. ]
But I'm sorry for worrying you.
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[Except it very much isn't. He'd give a good deal to understand what had drawn her to it, or how this had all happened. He's known her enough to think her better than this kind of reckless--there must be a reason, something must have happened. But in their guilt, her friends are quiet and shamed and as willingly recalcitrant as the unwitting blocks in Jean's mind. Charles sighs quietly.]
I'm just glad you're still here.
[Any loss right now would gut him, especially those that he feels directly responsible for. Especially when they'd just come so close to reconciliation over slights he's sure he's never going to be able to make up for, "his" or not. Any loss would gut him.
Losing Jean might actually be the death of him.no subject
You're just saying that to make me feel better.
[ Because she knows it isn't "alright". None of it is. That kid on that network post, any of them going to that outpost, Jean waking up in a hospital and unable to connect to her own powers. None of it was alright. ]
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When the world starts spinning backward.]I'm only conceding to that accusation if it's working.
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It's not.
[ Her face crumples as she looks away again, sniffing hard and trying to hold back tears. ]
Did I--did I kill someone again?
[ Someone who didn't deserve it. Someone whose head she got into and woke up in a hospital afterward. Like what happened with her mother.
Is that way she can't remember? Did she block it out? Did Charles? ]
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[If she has, it's not something anyone has said. And even through all of the upset lecturing and guilt from the others who came out of it with her, he trusts Logan to not obscure a detail so large.
But even if that's a grand exaggeration of what had actually happened on the Outpost, the question itself is a gut punch neither of them needed. He doesn't require a connection with her mind right now to know exactly where her memories have dragged her. He may not regret having taken Jean in--not even for a day--but there will never be any way to find comfort in the circumstances that led to it.
He shakes his head, and lets out a stuttered breath.]
Jean, no. You overextended yourself and collapsed.
[To put it lightly, more so than Charles even knows right now.]
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Then why can't I remember?! I can't even use my powers!
[ This is normal for her. This shouldn't be happening. ]
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