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Something feels off lately, though Ennis can't place what. Feels better outside, away from the bar, though that ain't nothing different, really.
There's something, though, and Ennis sits near the lake, up on a big rock, smoking and trying to think of anything but.
There's something, though, and Ennis sits near the lake, up on a big rock, smoking and trying to think of anything but.
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She doesn't look upset, or tense. Just a little disoriented, and it's fading.
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River's eyes drop again, and she watches the rock.
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Not very quickly, anyway.
Ennis turns his head to watch the horse move, and catches River's eye as he does, and there's something low there, dark.
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Somewhere, a finch calls defiance, and is answered by a handful of others.
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River, on the other hand, doesn't move. Just keeps watching Ennis, and gives him a minute in silence.
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"Don't have to." Low.
Breath in, and out. "There's grass."
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He says it soft and quiet, voice rumbling, and the smile falls.
"Same grass."
He don't sound too certain of that, though.
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Tries a smile. It's not faked; it is hesitant.
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"Same water, same sky."
Ain't really obvious who he's trying to convince.
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River pulls a knee up to her chest, curling her toes against stone, and wraps her arms loosely around it.
Softly, "So close your eyes."
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And Mal's kind of like this, right now.
"Let the clouds change," she whispers.
"Storm's gonna pass."
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"Sick of this fucking place," is the other thing he says, even more quiet, even more rough, but that one ain't the whole truth, it ain't the whole truth by a mile.
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"I know it," she says, very soft.
"It's a common symptom."
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And it's the closest, really, he's come to an accusation with her.
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"I'm not sick." Of the bar, that is.
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And it all makes sense, really, in Ennis' head. You got some place to go, you don't get quite so anxious to leave.
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If Ennis's eyes were open, he'd be able to see River's face: troubled, inward-turned, wistful. They're not, and he can't.
"Everybody leaves," she whispers after a long, long moment, and it's just a statement of fact. "Doors in his head and where the veins go under the zippers. Just got now."
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"Can't hold on to nobody for too long."
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This is not disagreement. On the contrary.
In the background comes the staccato cry of a thrush, and the dopplered buzz of a passing bee, and always the steady sound of lake water lapping on the shore.
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