Beverly Hopper (
runtowardsomething) wrote2022-07-23 11:45 pm
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It's strange, how quickly things go back to normal. It would be, anyway, if Beverly hadn't been in Darrow long enough to be extremely aware that that's just how it goes here. Shit happens and people move on. Usually, though, she isn't quite so directly involved. Usually, the insane, fucked up things that go on don't involve her whacking someone in the head with a tree branch after being dragged out of her tent in the middle of the night.
She doesn't know what happened to him after that, if he's alive or dead. She hasn't wanted to find out, afraid of the answer either way. What she does know is that there's a several-second span of time that she doesn't remember, that there was blood pooled on the sand and splattered on her, and that, in those few moments, she was in a different place and a different time, somewhere she doesn't want ever to be again.
All of it is difficult to shake off. She's fine, she's safe; she's been assured, too, that under the circumstances, nothing is going to come of what happened on that beach. Everyone's stories are consistent. They were under attack, and she defended herself the only way she could. That doesn't make it easier to get past, to move on, the way people here seem to so quickly. She still has to live with the thought that that's another death she very well might be responsible for.
Her therapist tells her to try not to think about it like that, but also that it's a process, one that takes work. She can't expect the way her mind works, the things that have been drilled into her from such an early age, to change immediately. So she frames it like that, repeating it over and over in her head: she defended herself, she fought back, she did what she had to do. She tries not to think about the blood.
At least fresh air helps clear her head. Despite the heat, she rides her bike out to the boardwalk, locking it in a bike rack before she climbs up the stairs, going in search of somewhere she can get a cold drink. Company will help, too, and she knows she'll have that here.
[ Feel free to say plans were made to meet up! Anything works~ ]
She doesn't know what happened to him after that, if he's alive or dead. She hasn't wanted to find out, afraid of the answer either way. What she does know is that there's a several-second span of time that she doesn't remember, that there was blood pooled on the sand and splattered on her, and that, in those few moments, she was in a different place and a different time, somewhere she doesn't want ever to be again.
All of it is difficult to shake off. She's fine, she's safe; she's been assured, too, that under the circumstances, nothing is going to come of what happened on that beach. Everyone's stories are consistent. They were under attack, and she defended herself the only way she could. That doesn't make it easier to get past, to move on, the way people here seem to so quickly. She still has to live with the thought that that's another death she very well might be responsible for.
Her therapist tells her to try not to think about it like that, but also that it's a process, one that takes work. She can't expect the way her mind works, the things that have been drilled into her from such an early age, to change immediately. So she frames it like that, repeating it over and over in her head: she defended herself, she fought back, she did what she had to do. She tries not to think about the blood.
At least fresh air helps clear her head. Despite the heat, she rides her bike out to the boardwalk, locking it in a bike rack before she climbs up the stairs, going in search of somewhere she can get a cold drink. Company will help, too, and she knows she'll have that here.
[ Feel free to say plans were made to meet up! Anything works~ ]
no subject
I didn't feel guilty, but sometimes I found myself fantasizing about taking a boat across the water and lighting fire to the whole island. I thought about Bill, or Beverly, splattered with blood, and decided I wouldn't have minded listening to all those assholes scream while their home burned to the ground. It might've even been a little fun.
I wasn't looking for her, but it felt like fate, in a way, to find her walking the boardwalk that afternoon. Flicking the butt of my spent cigarette over the edge of the boardwalk, I offered her a faint, knowing smirk.
She looked restless.
I knew the feeling.
no subject
Besides, she wouldn't really even want to stay away. There's a strange closeness that stems from going through something fucked up with another person. That was at least a part of what happened that last summer in Derry, with her and the other Losers, though she chooses to believe that wasn't all of it, and she feels something a little bit like that again now. He was the one with her in the immediate aftermath. That means something.
"Hey," she says when she's close enough, giving him a small, lopsided smile. "How's things?"
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It was strange, feeling like you knew someone, like there was some kind of understanding between you, only to realize that you really hadn't spent much time together. Small talk was awkward and stupid on the best days, but after you'd seen and done the kind of shit that we had, it just felt a little pointless.
"You doin' okay, Miss Marsh?"
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Neil is the only one who saw her in the immediate aftermath, wide-eyed and covered with wet blood. He might well have seen more than that, though she doesn't really understand it. It leaves her more inclined to try to be honest, not to shrug it off. "It's been weird," she says. "You know, since we got back."
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Reaching into my pocket, I pulled out the little baggy of weed and tin of rolling papers I kept there. I gestured to a sandy down on the beach and asked, "Wanna go smoke up?"
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Nodding toward the stairs that lead to the beach just a little ways ahead, she starts in that direction, glancing over at him as she does. "I'm surprised there's actually somewhere quiet."
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Finding a place to sit, I dropped down into the sand, legs pretzeled up under me and my shoes dumped to the side. Flipping open the tin, I pulled out a joint I'd already rolled earlier and put it between my lips.
"You know, Bill doesn't tell me much about you guys. It's like you've got this pact to keep each other's secrets," I said, the joint bobbing between my lips as I lifted my hip and pulled out my lighter. I don't sound bitter about it, 'cause I'm not. I know what it's like to be a kid and know you'd die for your best friend. "I haven't seen my best friend in seven years. I kinda wonder if she'd still know me."
I took a deep drag, and passed the joint over.
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Taking a drag from the joint buys her a moment's time to contemplate the rest of what Neil has said. They made a pact that summer — she has a scar on her hand to remember it by; she's not sure she would without it — but it wasn't to keep each other's secrets. They never knew hers to keep them.
"Bill… I think I'd know Bill anywhere," she admits with a shrug, offering the joint back to Neil again as she looks out at the ocean. She'd seen him, after all, the way he is now, even if it took seeing him stumble out of the water here to recall that. "But for what it's worth, there's no secret-keeping pact. He just doesn't know mine."
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I took a hit off the joint, holding it deep in my lungs and letting out a slow exhale.
"She knew all my secrets, but I dunno if I knew hers. I dunno if I ever asked."
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"Him, and the other Losers... I would have done anything for them. Still would. But there was a lot I never talked about."
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I couldn't help but try and imagine what they all must've been like, or even what my life might've been like if I'd had friends like that. I wouldn't ever take for granted what Wendy was to me, but I know I was way too much for her to handle on her own.
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Thoughtful a moment, she takes another hit from the joint. "They still wouldn't have gotten a lot of it. Never seemed worth getting into."
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"I dunno. Some shit, you're better off not carrying on your own."
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She just prefers not to need to.
"And even then, it's still... I don't know. Maybe it's harder to talk to them about it because they knew me then. Or maybe I just need a lot more therapy."