"Oh," a faint laugh. "It used to be a holiday. Families got together, had a massive feast and were supposed to feel grateful for all the things they had."
His own experience with the holiday was not that so he has no fondness for it. "But roast turkey was the main entree. I haven't had turkey in years--they weren't smart enough to escape the walkers so they're all but extinct."
Extinct. He does know that word, and it makes him glance over at Jesus, something in the same family as dismayed flashing across his face in the moment before he glances at the bag, too.
He looks up at him, heart fluttering at such a simple statement. They said earlier this was okay so he leans over--hands free, he's handling poultry--and kisses him. "As long as I don't burn it."
He doesn't melt the way he had yesterday, but he stops working with the knife and as he kisses Jesus back, he feels himself steady. He's still worried, there are still a lot of problems he doesn't have the solutions to, he still feels... heavy. But he's not alone in it.
"I'm grateful for you." He looks back at what he's doing but doesn't quite focus on it, distracted by K's presence beside him. "I never really had a good Thanksgiving. There was always a lot of fighting."
Finally, something K doesn't have to ask about. He covered holiday shifts for patrol officers. He responded to some of the kinds of calls that come in when families get together because they feel obligated to, for tradition.
Or just in general. "Is it something you'd want to give another try here?" is the most pertinent question as he goes back to cutting up potatoes, four words he never expected to hear tucked carefully close to his heart behind a smile.
"I've never had a family holiday," he says, which isn't an answer, just thinking aloud.
"Not really," he hedges a moment later; he has a memory, but even more than before now, he knows it's not really his. "But those sound like things that make sense to me to celebrate. And I think we could avoid fighting."
He pictures it: a table with the people he's gathering up here. Rosita and V and Vrenille and K. Maybe some of their people. Maybe enough they'd need a large table, need to rent a room.
"I'd like that," he says, but quietly, afraid to commit to it.
"It's the last Thursday in November." Not far off, really. He finishes putting butter on the turkey and washes his hands, then frowns at the potatoes. He's not sure how to make them into mashed potatoes, so he cheats and decides they'll be roasted, too.
He catches that glance, hears the promise and wants to back out just because he doesn't want to hope for it only to not get it. But K promised. K deserves a little faith.
"Well, anything, really. The point is to share what we all have--we could all bring a favorite dish."
It's nice already to have something else to focus on, something to look forward to; backup plans to make in case V backslides or isn't feeling up to having people over yet.
He nods readily.
"I just also want to be ready in case that makes someone not want to come. Or not be able to." Like him, who is now watching Jesus with keener attention.
"We always had a company that brought us food. We could always cater, but I don't mind cooking." He shifts uneasily. "Who would you invite?" A glance at V's door. "Besides him." Because of course V is invited. And if he can't make it, there will still be a plate for him.
"Them." Vrenille and his people. "And Drake and Ephemera--my Dominant and his boyfriend. My friend Rosita." He finds a vegetable peeler and starts in on the carrots, then looks up at K and offers it to him to try.
He checks the oven, which is still preheating. "I always hoped for a dinner with family. That I'd get to spend it with my actual family. And I never got it but it didn't stop me hoping for a while." He looks up at K, wondering if he's experienced anything like that kind of loss. "So after a while I learned not to hope. This is like unlearning a survival skill. It's just... Hard. Scary. But I'll be okay."
He has. Only it was never his, not really, so he hasn't. It's a complicated clash of emotions that he would normally be able to suppress except he wasn't expecting it just now. Except he's already suppressing so much else, so for just a moment his entire face falls before he clears his throat and marshals resolve into its place.
"If you do, it's okay," he says again, because unlearning survival skills is hard, scary, and anything but linear. It's on the table. "But I think life is better with hope. I want to help."
It was never his, but he knows exactly how it felt; it was never his, so it's not like he can actually say that.
He picks up a tomato, runs his thumb over the thin, smooth skin while he considers.
"There's no hope in Los Angeles. The planet is dying. Everyone left on it will die if they can't get off it. There's no saving it, no going back, and that... takes its toll. It's hard for people who have no future to imagine trying to build one anyway." This is the world he was activated into. "I remember some of those people I knew, when I start to wonder what the point is. I remember how hard it was to live that way, and how much better everything became when I met someone with hope."
no subject
"What's Thanksgiving?"
no subject
His own experience with the holiday was not that so he has no fondness for it. "But roast turkey was the main entree. I haven't had turkey in years--they weren't smart enough to escape the walkers so they're all but extinct."
no subject
"We can be grateful we have turkey," he suggests.
no subject
no subject
"Then I'll be grateful for you, too," he adds.
no subject
no subject
Or just in general. "Is it something you'd want to give another try here?" is the most pertinent question as he goes back to cutting up potatoes, four words he never expected to hear tucked carefully close to his heart behind a smile.
no subject
no subject
"Not really," he hedges a moment later; he has a memory, but even more than before now, he knows it's not really his. "But those sound like things that make sense to me to celebrate. And I think we could avoid fighting."
K, personally, doesn't fight.
no subject
"I'd like that," he says, but quietly, afraid to commit to it.
no subject
"When is Thanksgiving?" His own voice normal, steady.
no subject
no subject
"I'll do my best," he promises. "What else besides turkey?"
no subject
"Well, anything, really. The point is to share what we all have--we could all bring a favorite dish."
no subject
He nods readily.
"I just also want to be ready in case that makes someone not want to come. Or not be able to." Like him, who is now watching Jesus with keener attention.
no subject
no subject
He's watching Jesus now too, trying to find the root of the nerves.
"Who would you want there?"
no subject
"Are you serious about it or just curious?"
no subject
"Shouldn't I be?" he asks, then shakes his head, tries again. "Would you rather not?"
It sparked with Jesus. If he doesn't want a big deal made, K will bring him a turkey sandwich on the last Thursday of November and go from there.
no subject
K wouldn't be planning this without Jesus and it makes it seem more real, more important, than all the sullen holidays he'd had as a kid.
He doesn't know how to explain the way it stokes an old fear in him. He does know he doesn't like that he's making K second guess himself, though.
"I want to do it."
no subject
He doesn't know what to make of the mixed signals he's getting, so the best he can offer is, "If you change your mind, it's okay." K won't be angry.
"I've never done anything like this. I don't know how good I'll be at it."
no subject
He checks the oven, which is still preheating. "I always hoped for a dinner with family. That I'd get to spend it with my actual family. And I never got it but it didn't stop me hoping for a while." He looks up at K, wondering if he's experienced anything like that kind of loss. "So after a while I learned not to hope. This is like unlearning a survival skill. It's just... Hard. Scary. But I'll be okay."
no subject
"If you do, it's okay," he says again, because unlearning survival skills is hard, scary, and anything but linear. It's on the table. "But I think life is better with hope. I want to help."
no subject
"How do you keep hoping?" K, specifically.
no subject
He picks up a tomato, runs his thumb over the thin, smooth skin while he considers.
"There's no hope in Los Angeles. The planet is dying. Everyone left on it will die if they can't get off it. There's no saving it, no going back, and that... takes its toll. It's hard for people who have no future to imagine trying to build one anyway." This is the world he was activated into. "I remember some of those people I knew, when I start to wonder what the point is. I remember how hard it was to live that way, and how much better everything became when I met someone with hope."
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)