To say that he and Alex have come to an understanding about the kind of work she’s chosen to pursue is something that seems to carry implications about his character Darlington’s not sure he likes. They’re deserved, maybe, given how poorly--and wasn’t that an understatement--he’d reacted at first, but deserved doesn’t mean at all that he has to like them. But they’ve talked, the two of them, and tried to acknowledge each others’ perspectives with clearer and more level heads than they’d managed before, and while it all should have happened much sooner than it did, at least now they’ve settled into something the both of them can live with.
It doesn’t entirely stop his concern, nor his tendency to sleep a little shallowly on nights she’s working until she’s home and curled up beside him, and certainly hasn’t lessened the way he still bristles at any mention of Joseph Kavinsky’s name, but perhaps nothing ever really will.
By choice, he hasn’t been back to the club--and as far as he thinks Alex knows, that’s the only time he’s ever been--since the night he’d come to apologize, the night when he’d let go of the difficult, stubborn parts of himself he’d clung to for reasons he stopped believing in almost as soon as they occurred. He’d have happily kept it that way, at least for the time being, but Alex had texted about an hour and a half into her shift; a short message about having forgotten a pair of heels she needed for a set at the back of her closet and asking him to bring them by. And, well, saying no to Alex Stern is something he’s never been particularly good at doing anyway.
So he goes, finding the shoes and putting them in some tote bag one of them got for free at a city event, hailing a cab outside the Bramford and once again weathering the smirking, winking look the driver shoots him in the mirror when he rattles off the address. The cab turns onto Paper and pulls to a stop outside the club; Darlington pays, already typing out a message to Alex--Outside now; where should I meet you?--as he gets out of the car and starts towards the front doors.
It doesn’t entirely stop his concern, nor his tendency to sleep a little shallowly on nights she’s working until she’s home and curled up beside him, and certainly hasn’t lessened the way he still bristles at any mention of Joseph Kavinsky’s name, but perhaps nothing ever really will.
By choice, he hasn’t been back to the club--and as far as he thinks Alex knows, that’s the only time he’s ever been--since the night he’d come to apologize, the night when he’d let go of the difficult, stubborn parts of himself he’d clung to for reasons he stopped believing in almost as soon as they occurred. He’d have happily kept it that way, at least for the time being, but Alex had texted about an hour and a half into her shift; a short message about having forgotten a pair of heels she needed for a set at the back of her closet and asking him to bring them by. And, well, saying no to Alex Stern is something he’s never been particularly good at doing anyway.
So he goes, finding the shoes and putting them in some tote bag one of them got for free at a city event, hailing a cab outside the Bramford and once again weathering the smirking, winking look the driver shoots him in the mirror when he rattles off the address. The cab turns onto Paper and pulls to a stop outside the club; Darlington pays, already typing out a message to Alex--Outside now; where should I meet you?--as he gets out of the car and starts towards the front doors.
no subject
Date: 2020-03-02 02:39 am (UTC)"I don't understand what your problem is--with me, or with her doing this shit," he said. "You know a disapproving stare isn't going to make her stop."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-02 03:19 am (UTC)"Does it matter to you, what my problem is?" he asks, and despite the lingering chill in his voice, the question is genuine. "With you? With this?" The latter half of Kavinsky's retort actually has Darlington smiling, though it's thin and brief, the kind of thing you might miss if you weren't paying attention. "I know very well there isn't a person alive who could make Alex Stern stop doing something she wanted to do."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-03 12:10 am (UTC)There was something smarmy about him, some cocky bullshit that Kavinsky hated so much. There was nothing he could do about it. He wasn't even sure that he really wanted to pick a fight about it, except that he always wanted to pick a fight.
And besides all that Kavinsky could say a lot about Alex stopping things she might not want to, because there was an expectation. They'd had a good long talk about the move from Van Nuys to New Haven, how to change there. Kavinsky just didn't give a shit one way or another.
no subject
Date: 2020-03-03 03:10 am (UTC)Of course, this very topic had broken that control of his once before, led him to say things he'll spend however long he and Alex have together trying to make up for, but the fissures of that earlier break are still there within his resolve. It's easier, maybe, for it to crack a little again now.
"But no issue spitting on her for the delectation of an audience, though, right? Bringing her tattoos back, treating her like dirt. Just what any friend might do."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-09 07:30 pm (UTC)It was an unkind thing, that laugh. Dismissing the concern in the question because it didn't read like concern. Instead, it just read like misunderstanding and not wanting to listen to Alex, who Kavinsky was sure would have explained it, if Darlington was willing to listen.
He crossed his arms, shoes dangling from his fingers.
"Yeah, we're both really upset that a bunch of dumb fuckers are into watching us get rude at each other, and generally making six-hundred in tips a night, each. It's terrible to have such a great rapport and trust and understanding with someone, and be able to exude sexual energy with each other when the thought of fucking is actually laughable."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-09 09:33 pm (UTC)The explanation that follows that laugh is not dissimilar to what Alex had said when they'd sat down at last to hash things out and come to some agreement; all this talk of power and control, of negotiation and understanding, of the weird thrill of deceiving an audience with more money than sense. But here--and maybe it's the messenger, and maybe it's the location, and maybe it's that he knows at the back of his mind that his disgust is irrational--all he hears is the sneer in Kavinsky's voice. "Her other routines, her other nights, seem to be lucrative enough," he says. "So you'll forgive me if an extra, what, hundred? Two hundred? If that seems like a piss-poor kind of excuse."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-14 04:53 pm (UTC)Was this really how it was going to be? He wasn't sure he really cared, at the end. His phone buzzed in his pocket, and he knew it was Alex saying she needed her shoes or just checking in that he hadn't been eaten alive out there in this weird conversation with Darlington.
He didn't pull his phone out. Just stared him down.
"Anything else you wanna get off your chest? Or you just need to feel big and good about yourself for thinking so little about what your girl does with her free time and who she does it with?"
no subject
Date: 2020-03-14 10:57 pm (UTC)"Is that all you think it is?" he says when Kavinsky gives his stupid, snide verdict on Darlington's supposed motivations. "A need for me to prop up my ego at her expense? At yours?"
The worst part is, there'd been a time when that particular assessment wouldn't have been far from the truth; when all Alex had been to him was a sheaf of papers in a manila file folder, a gory assortment of black and white crime scene photos, a hollow-eyed unfortunate handcuffed to a hospital bed and given an opportunity he hadn't thought she deserved. He'd considered it doing the magnanimous thing, giving her some kind of chance--and yes, it had made him feel like the bigger person, the gentleman of Lethe and the lord of Black Elm, and he'd liked the feeling of it.
She'd become more to him than that, and yet more still here in Darrow--but it hadn't prevented him from sliding back into that cold and condescending position, had it? She'd made a choice he hadn't expected, hadn't wanted for her, and once more he'd responded in a way she hadn't deserved. Not that he'll concede as such now, and certainly not to him.
"I only ever wanted to make sure she wasn't harmed. If she didn't need to be. If I could prevent it, this time."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-16 09:10 pm (UTC)Kavinsky wasn't sure that Darlington was at making peace. Alex seemed more at ease than she had been when Kavinsky had accidentally revealed the tattoos, but that didn't mean anything at all, did it?
He stepped toward Darlington, still arch and derisive.
"You're not her keeper and you don't get to decide what's good for her because that's up to her," he pointed out. "And she's not being hurt by a little stage fighting twice a week. No more than I am when she kicks my ass for tips instead."
no subject
Date: 2020-03-23 02:37 am (UTC)He and Alex understand one another about this. That's what matters, and if she hasn't seen fit to explain it to Kavinsky--if Kavinsky hasn't seen fit to listen, if she has--then there's no need for Darlington to attempt the same, is there?
Kavinsky steps towards him, the shoes dangling from one hand, and Darlington stays where he is. "Not her keeper, no," he says. "But we're each the only other person we have from home. Which means something to me, even if it's of little consequence to you."