[Which is really all he means to say, and he certainly dos not mean to try to worry anybody.... especially not enough to come check up on him. He just stays on his couch, sometimes checking his Fluid, sometimes reading one of the books he's recently purchased, sometimes just looking out the window.]
[It's a rare thing that Logan finds himself in the role of the concerned guy. Uncertain and searching for the right balance of proximity and space is an effort it's not like him to put in. Not when instinct tells him he's never made anyone's life better by being more involved in it.
But messages like that are difficult not to hear like a request to repair whatever it is that's gone wrong.]
[When most everything he knows about Jean-Paul's absence is second hand, refraining from trampling the distance the other man sought is no small act of discipline. One that Logan finds himself second guessing constantly. Constantly weighing whether he's really being asked to prove himself capable of respecting boundaries or something more instinctual and impassioned until neither answer seems likely to make things better if it's still carried out by him.]
Johnny. I don't know what made you have to leave us. But please. Just tell me if this is one of those things where I need to learn to be better at being there for you. Or if this is this one of those things where you're trying to tell me any more of me is the last goddamn thing you want right now. Because I don't think I've ever got that test right in my life and I'm afraid of what happens if I fail you.
[Unless in the last few days Logan's learned to fly, the time between that messages' arrival and the moment he's knocking at Jean-Paul's door is far too narrow a moment for a man who moves at Logan's pace to have made it all the way from the cabin.
But there he is. Dutifully and with beer.
His eyes rove over Jean-Paul carefully. As if looking for some sign outward sign of his wellbeing.]
[Jean-Paul opens the door, and one thing may be apparent: he's older. Physically he looks much the same, but it's there in his eyes for anyone who cares to see it.
His face cracks into a brilliant smile before he practically launches himself at Logan, wrapping his arms around his neck and hugging him tightly.]
Merci. Come on, come in.
[He ushers Logan inside, returning to his spot on the old worn couch. There's a blanket there which he tucks his feet under as he waits for Logan to get him a beer and lumber over.]
He really doesn't know what he was expecting to see, but so long as the other man seems in good health the fact that he might look a little more tired doesn't register as anything worth commenting on.
And when he breaks into that smile concern dissolves. He could have stayed there with the younger man locked in a bear hug for ages.
The bottle hisses as he opens it up and passes it off to Jean-Paul. "You look... great." He attempts to shake off his confusion with a little chuckle. "I guess I shouldn't be surprised. You always look great. I just didn't know what you'd been up to and. Well. You know this place. I never know what to think when you boys aren't right where I can see you."
"I do know," he says softly. He sips his beer and then carefully holds it with both hands. He regards Logan with his startlingly blue eyes, waiting for him to settle in.
"I went back." There it is, stated bluntly.
"Your kid is trying to fuck my husband."
Maybe not the best thing to lead with, but it's what comes out.
Sitting back and stretching his arm around Jean-Paul, he moves like he still expects the other shoe to drop. There has to be something worse than this quiet scene to have kept the man away so many days.
"Back? Back to— home?" It doesn't feel quiet right to call it that after the promises they've made here, but nonetheless a better word escapes him. And then so does a cough and a sputter when he struggles to swallow his beer.
Jean-Paul stares and then laughs. He laughs until his stomach aches, barely managing not to spill his beer. He finally tapers off into hiccups of giggles, wiping his eyes with one hand.
"What a question," he says finally. "Daken. He's on my team, now. He sure takes after you, you ho." Jean-Paul leans over and kisses Logan's cheek. "Sorry for dropping that on you. It's just what came to mind first."
He drops his chin to the heel of his palm while Jean-Paul collects himself from that bout of unbridled amusement. He's willing to tolerate being the butt of that particular joke though. If only because it really does seem to bring a rare sort of joy to a man he came here out of concern.
The answer, however, only furthers his confusion. "Daken," he mumbles. He never loved the name. "He's not... he shouldn't be anywhere. He's dead."
"Akihiro, ouais," Jean-Paul says. He plays idly with Logan's hair.
"Got a surprise for you, love: a LOT of us come back in the future. There's a resurrection process. Before I came back I had literally just gotten my sister scheduled to be brought back."
He sighs and takes a long swallow of beer.
"Chrisse, you're so... solid. I think I missed that."
Having access to his Deerington memories, Jean-Paul at least knows that using the man's given name is important. And that he probably ought to play down how annoying he thinks he is, at least for a while.
"Mm. Who do you think? There's a council. Xavier and Magneto, Storm, Jean, Emma, Kurt... others. We have a sovereign nation, there's new rules." He shrugs lightly.
He stays quiet for a while, then nods, smiling softly. "I did. He's... really something."
"It's... good. It's good that he's ok. Or. You know. Breathing at least." It's not exactly a realization that should take as much uncertainty as it seems to plague him with. "I'm not sure if I should feel less guilty about it. 'Cause I don't."
"We? Mutants?" Even if there are a couple of names on there who probably the kind of people you want in charge of a nation the whole idea sounds like a nightmare on repeat. They've done this before. People ended up dead.
"And..." He looks expectant of something. The last time they talked about Kyle, Jean-Paul didn't love the idea of willfully engaging in some kind of adultery. Resurrections and high councils aside, the thing that makes him worry for their future is anything that might have changed Jean-Paul's mind about life as they know it here. "Does that... change this?"
"Breathing all over anything attractive," Jean-Paul snorts. "You shouldn't feel guilty at all, Logan."
He nods. "It's not like Utopia. But... well. You know me, I'm not an optimist. But it's a lot better."
Jean-Paul sets his beer aside so that he can take Logan's face in his hands. "I remember everything that's happened here," he says softly. "I remember every moment I've spent wit' you. The forget-me-nots and the poetry and the fantastic sex." He leans in and kisses Logan firmly on the mouth.
"I feel a little weird, sure. But if anything has changed, I hope it's for the better. I've learned more about what love takes." He smiles. "Just forgive me if I start to yell at the wrong man for leaving his shoes out?"
He winces at the speed at which Jean-Paul assumes the best of him. He takes long drink and fixes his eyes on the bottle like there's something there worth scrutinizing. "I'm the one who took his life, Johnny. I'll always feel guilty for that."
Jean-Paul's right. He's not an optimist. But that's what makes his remarks all the more interesting. It's hard not to be hopeful that they've maybe finally learned from their own mistakes. Yet, it's hard to picture what that looks like without seeing it for himself.
With his attention swept up in Jean-Paul's hands, that glib but not in the least bit inaccurate assessment of their time together here turns him bashful. Though it's not often he's on the receiving end of such tender reassurances— because it's not often he locks his pride far enough away to permit himself to request them— not even his best attempt at casual can hide the joy and relief of knowing what they found here is at least as real as the places they used to call home.
Reaching around blindly to abandon his own drink without spilling it, he doesn't hesitate to gather Jean-Paul up in his arms. "Darlin', you can yell at me for anything you want so long as yer not goin' anywhere."
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why does this already feel like bad news?
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Just checking in on you.
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Oh.
Well.
I'm good.
You're good?
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Stuff I should know about or...
You're still at the apartment right?
In case.
I dunno. It's just good to know where you are.
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I am, yeah. Just for a bit longer.
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Well.
If you want someone to talk to.
Or not talk.
Probably better at that.
Either way.
You know.
Just ask.
Or just tell me to shut up.
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I miss you.
[Which is really all he means to say, and he certainly dos not mean to try to worry anybody.... especially not enough to come check up on him. He just stays on his couch, sometimes checking his Fluid, sometimes reading one of the books he's recently purchased, sometimes just looking out the window.]
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But messages like that are difficult not to hear like a request to repair whatever it is that's gone wrong.]
I can fix that.
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[He badly wants to ask Logan to come to him anyway. He's already spoken to the others, told them he'll be home in a few more days.
Still...]
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[When most everything he knows about Jean-Paul's absence is second hand, refraining from trampling the distance the other man sought is no small act of discipline. One that Logan finds himself second guessing constantly. Constantly weighing whether he's really being asked to prove himself capable of respecting boundaries or something more instinctual and impassioned until neither answer seems likely to make things better if it's still carried out by him.]
Johnny.
I don't know what made you have to leave us.
But please.
Just tell me if this is one of those things where I need to learn to be better at being there for you. Or if this is this one of those things where you're trying to tell me any more of me is the last goddamn thing you want right now.
Because I don't think I've ever got that test right in my life and I'm afraid of what happens if I fail you.
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Ah fuck it. Come see me. Bring beer.
action;
[Unless in the last few days Logan's learned to fly, the time between that messages' arrival and the moment he's knocking at Jean-Paul's door is far too narrow a moment for a man who moves at Logan's pace to have made it all the way from the cabin.
But there he is. Dutifully and with beer.
His eyes rove over Jean-Paul carefully. As if looking for some sign outward sign of his wellbeing.]
"I missed you too."
action;
His face cracks into a brilliant smile before he practically launches himself at Logan, wrapping his arms around his neck and hugging him tightly.]
Merci. Come on, come in.
[He ushers Logan inside, returning to his spot on the old worn couch. There's a blanket there which he tucks his feet under as he waits for Logan to get him a beer and lumber over.]
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And when he breaks into that smile concern dissolves. He could have stayed there with the younger man locked in a bear hug for ages.
The bottle hisses as he opens it up and passes it off to Jean-Paul. "You look... great." He attempts to shake off his confusion with a little chuckle. "I guess I shouldn't be surprised. You always look great. I just didn't know what you'd been up to and. Well. You know this place. I never know what to think when you boys aren't right where I can see you."
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"I went back." There it is, stated bluntly.
"Your kid is trying to fuck my husband."
Maybe not the best thing to lead with, but it's what comes out.
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"Back? Back to— home?" It doesn't feel quiet right to call it that after the promises they've made here, but nonetheless a better word escapes him. And then so does a cough and a sputter when he struggles to swallow his beer.
"My? Wait. Which one?"
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"What a question," he says finally. "Daken. He's on my team, now. He sure takes after you, you ho." Jean-Paul leans over and kisses Logan's cheek. "Sorry for dropping that on you. It's just what came to mind first."
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The answer, however, only furthers his confusion. "Daken," he mumbles. He never loved the name. "He's not... he shouldn't be anywhere. He's dead."
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"Got a surprise for you, love: a LOT of us come back in the future. There's a resurrection process. Before I came back I had literally just gotten my sister scheduled to be brought back."
He sighs and takes a long swallow of beer.
"Chrisse, you're so... solid. I think I missed that."
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"Resurrection process? Scheduled?" He raises an eyebrow suspiciously. "Who's playing god now?"
He shuffles a little closer and his arm pulls Jean-Paul in a bit more before hesitation comes over him. "So. You met him? Kyle."
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"Mm. Who do you think? There's a council. Xavier and Magneto, Storm, Jean, Emma, Kurt... others. We have a sovereign nation, there's new rules." He shrugs lightly.
He stays quiet for a while, then nods, smiling softly. "I did. He's... really something."
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"We? Mutants?" Even if there are a couple of names on there who probably the kind of people you want in charge of a nation the whole idea sounds like a nightmare on repeat. They've done this before. People ended up dead.
"And..." He looks expectant of something. The last time they talked about Kyle, Jean-Paul didn't love the idea of willfully engaging in some kind of adultery. Resurrections and high councils aside, the thing that makes him worry for their future is anything that might have changed Jean-Paul's mind about life as they know it here. "Does that... change this?"
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He nods. "It's not like Utopia. But... well. You know me, I'm not an optimist. But it's a lot better."
Jean-Paul sets his beer aside so that he can take Logan's face in his hands. "I remember everything that's happened here," he says softly. "I remember every moment I've spent wit' you. The forget-me-nots and the poetry and the fantastic sex." He leans in and kisses Logan firmly on the mouth.
"I feel a little weird, sure. But if anything has changed, I hope it's for the better. I've learned more about what love takes." He smiles. "Just forgive me if I start to yell at the wrong man for leaving his shoes out?"
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Jean-Paul's right. He's not an optimist. But that's what makes his remarks all the more interesting. It's hard not to be hopeful that they've maybe finally learned from their own mistakes. Yet, it's hard to picture what that looks like without seeing it for himself.
With his attention swept up in Jean-Paul's hands, that glib but not in the least bit inaccurate assessment of their time together here turns him bashful. Though it's not often he's on the receiving end of such tender reassurances— because it's not often he locks his pride far enough away to permit himself to request them— not even his best attempt at casual can hide the joy and relief of knowing what they found here is at least as real as the places they used to call home.
Reaching around blindly to abandon his own drink without spilling it, he doesn't hesitate to gather Jean-Paul up in his arms. "Darlin', you can yell at me for anything you want so long as yer not goin' anywhere."
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