[ He seems so fatigued. That seems...the worst of it, at least on the surface. She can recall Sherlock's expression when seeing her in tactical gear with a gun pointed at his face, and she can hear his voice immediately offering his help despite. She had still shot him (will still shoot him). The theatre laid out for her in his mind palace had shown her both future and past, and it still doesn't help her feel any more certain of where she stands while here in the present. It doesn't make her feel at ease; if anything she already wishes to rewind time back to the fair in January and keep from ever seeing Will Graham that day. Mary is also weary, and overkoalafied for this shit.
She had shot Sherlock with only one warning, only one step, and even if it wasn't a head shot, hadn't he died, if only for a time? Here she is presenting a truth willingly, and this man may get to walk out the door with his heart still beating. Possibly bearing cupcakes.
Why? Because of how circumstances have been forced to alter in this world? Because she's backed into a corner? With John's (scarce) knowledge of her and the realization of how much worse the other imPorts can be, is that all it takes? Well, it isn't as if she's going so far as to really ask forgiveness or even explain herself. If she had faith, her gut wouldn't twist so, even as her tone cools and she once more becomes stock-still. ]
That I can shapeshift? John, Sherlock...and you. That I know how to point a gun? Same answer. It doesn't ever need to go beyond that.
[ Said as if that's all any of them know. Maybe it is. Is her marriage really built on that much faith? What more that Sherlock and John know still doesn't add up to much by anyone's sane perspective, and she's reluctant to deliver even that much. What might Will deduce on her, just as Sherlock had after being shot in the chest and awakening in the hospital? ]
By now I'm certain others beyond Frederick and Bishop are aware of an imitator running around, but what matters is that this cannot connect back to John. Frederick is not to be trusted with that level of power, and April can't be a part of this. Nobody can.
[ Maybe he can trust April with his world, but Mary can't trust anybody outside of hers. Can she trust Will? Mary tells herself she wouldn't, same as she would anyone. But she does know how to practice something similar, something almost, when no other opportunity is presented. The only alternative is to simply kill him, and even if she was going to be that dramatic, she's aware that imPorts don't always remain dead. No matter who she likes, their demise is always going to be a consideration, even if it's a distant what-if scenario behind a door with a number. ]
John wasn't part of this. He didn't know.
[ Said as if it isn't the first time he's been kept in the dark. Well? She doesn't need John finding out through Will, and she certainly doesn't need him taking the blame for something she did on her own. Will is handling this remarkably well, but that seems to make her more on edge than anything. ]
[Please don't shoot, Mary. Look at those eyes, conflicted, but knowing he has only one course of action here. Jaw tense, lips neither frown nor smile, but somehow managing to give off the appearance of truly miserable. He doesn't like this any more than she seems to. He doesn't like all the lies, but he understands their necessity.
He doesn't much care for the idea of keeping things from April, either, but he's done it before. He felt he couldn't tell anyone about Hannibal Lecter, and why would he? Abel Gideon, Freddie Lounds, Frederick Chilton, and Abigail Hobbs all knew more than he did. They had been there, and they kept silent as well. Will Graham being one his most front and center victims/survivors would be an incredibly biased source to get honest information from, so why bother spreading the word?]
Okay. [Almost inaudible, but his lips move and he jerks his head in a nod. She can figure it out. But does she realize what she's doing, he wonders. She says the decision is his, and goes onto make it for him. Is this Mary in her true state, this woman who pretends to give choice while surrounding any other option with bloody animal traps, ready to snap up and crush flesh, muscle, and bone? It is, perhaps fortunately for Mary, a highly effective tactic with Will Graham. It has been used on him before, to great (and disastrous) results. He feels it fortunate, at least, that he's got enough clarity to be aware that's what is going on. Perhaps they're both lucky, in this tapestry that's weaving together even as it unravels.] Are we going to finish these cupcakes or what?
[He's also very used to the idea of stress cooking and baking. Of getting one's appetite back, even while he feels better suited to vomiting everything in his stomach on the table itself.
[ Of course she is watching him more closely than ever before, his response to this literal life or death (always always a gamble even here). But even with her feeling that he's being honest, there is no denying a certain amount of faith has loosened those shackles. Whatever traps she may lay, he does have certain leverage over her. Perhaps that's better. Expecting her friendships to be lopsided in terms of knowledge, once more engaging with those who can hurt (almost) as much as they can be hurt ignites more freedom than it ought to. Both sets of shackles have been worn down in her eyes, and that can both hinder and help. The uncertainty makes her uncomfortable, but she must accept it with open arms and try to see it for what else it could be. You can't fault the opportunistic, Will. ]
Okay?
[ It's like whiplash, for everything he could still ask or say, he just agrees. It may not be joyously, but it isn't with much fuss like John, nor is it with loud analysis like Sherlock. In his own way, he's allowing her a reprieve she hadn't known she was seeking. Even if she'd been asking for his cooperation, perhaps Mary hadn't actually been expecting it so simply, as proven by her sudden scoff. That much turns into a hushed laugh of disbelief as he brings about cupcakes.
It could be shock! This twit just nods along after she'd agonized about this for weeks? She should kill him out of spite. But recognizing that he has indeed known about her former work for a couple months now and told nobody might be the saving grace above all. He could have sat on it for his own leverage, but he hasn't threatened to use it. So there's that.
That and being blood brothers with Hannibal Lecter. ]
The...double boiler is above the sink. We need to melt the white chocolate and cream.
[Yes, okay. He said that, didn't he? Gosh, what more does she want? It's like no matter what he does, she's going to question it. Why could that be, he's been nothing but harmless and unassuming all along, no need to worry.
Okay.]
And here I've just been using regular pots or pans for that sort of thing.
[He looks up at her with that same harmless and unassuming face, running his hands up his thighs (that don't do much just yet either) before he pushes off the chair, neither smiling nor frowning. Less miserable this time, though, something bordering on fond. He would never use a fancy cooking or baking tool in a fight if he could help it, because that sounds like something he'd be sorely scolded on. If a fight broke out and it was all he had, that's a different story! But he'd prefer there to be no violence, thank you kindly. He's not infected, has no disease to blame it on. Mary's not infected, either (he hopes). There is no point in getting physical.
Except the plague, and John being away, but that's another type of physical altogether.]
Did Abigail leave anything here, by the way?
[This is totally a normal conversation to have while they're making food. Very healthy. And while Will hasn't been using this specific sort of tool in his own kitchen, Mary may note he still appears to be very familiar with its function and design.
Blood brothers who hung out in the kitchen, one of the Daily Doubles on Jeopardy. You either win or you lose your entire bank, and Alex comes around to stab you in the face.]
You could simply put a metal bowl over a pan. Keeps the heat more even, is all. Just fill the bottom with two or three inches of water.
[ What normal conversation! Like nothing at all happened, but it very much did. Even if Mary is also very accustomed to bouncing back or even barrelling on ahead when needed, her worst expectations make it a struggle to accept the ease with which Will cooperates. At least she accepts it more than she had with Sherlock (by his design).
Abigail sounds like an abrupt topic shift while Mary is still circling around Will's lack of relevant questions, but the girl never seems to be that far from his thoughts. It doesn't help put Mary at ease (why ask now?), but it's an answer she can give fairly. If she wished, she could cut all affection out of her voice, but that wouldn't help her any. She's fond of Abigail, and pretending she isn't won't charm Will Graham any. ]
Not really, unless you count her box of Cheez-Its getting stale in the pantry.
[ There's a further moment of considering before she shrugs and adds on while measuring out the white chocolate, keeping Will in her peripheral all the while. There's no hurry, as the cupcakes are still baking. ]
I found a hair elastic of hers when cleaning one of the guest rooms last month. ...Why?
[Couple inches of water, can do. Splendidly so, this apron she's left for him to wear does not fit him. His body, sure, but the words...Will does plenty in the kitchen. The kitchen is a great place, a place where people come together as much as it is a place where they're completely torn apart. He looks over at her mention of Cheez-Its and thinks well, yes, he could joke about how April and he have run out and take it home, play it off as something he's definitely not hoarding or anything.
But a hair elastic. Oh. Oh goodness, he can't get away with that one the same, can he? Like hell is he going to be giving it to April, and he has no intentions to grow his hair that unruly. She asks for reasoning and Will's eyebrows lift. He knows this might sound odd.
He's going to get it out there anyway. Be honest, politely.]
May I have them?
[Why? Because Will has a small shrine of her old belongings, and he assumes that Mary hasn't absorbed Abigail's elastic into her own collection. It's possible she threw it away, even! But if she hasn't...]
[ WOW. So because she's been lying to his face since the day she met him, she owes him Abigail's Cheez-Its? I think not. ]
I'll get the elastic for you.
[ Does that answer your question? But before she goes to head for the stairs (why would she worry about leaving Will Graham alone in her kitchen?), Mary twists her lips in thoughtful consideration before explaining further. ]
I was keeping the snacks there for when she returns.
[ DON'T TAKE ABIGAIL'S STALE CRACKERS, Mary will be good. If he looks, he'll even see that half of the shelf is still empty while everything is jampacked, as if purposely reserved. ]
[No worries there, either. Mary turns to leave and Will continues on in the kitchen. Bless his heart, he's serious about these cupcakes. Seriously invested, now. What's the alternative, stop and risk the hurricane of his mind dissipating, physically, all over Mary's floor? That is exceptionally unkind of him, so he busies himself as much as he can. He throws a look her way at the idea of Abigail returning, and yes. He does look in the pantry and see that. He almost snags those staling crackers, too. But she'll return to him at his post. And he'll reach out to take that elastic with small interest if there's any hair attached and a grumbled, almost defeated:]
She's not coming back, you know.
[It's the bitterness of a father who didn't lose his children, but had them taken. The difference between a child who has a legitimate, tragic accident and one that happened because of another person just not doing what they were supposed to. Going out of their way to be dangerous, taking pride in it. In Will's case, he doesn't have only "God" to blame. He knows exactly who is at fault, who should be rotting in jail.]
April keeps to her three months rule, but that's never come true with my people.
[Abel Gideon. Freddie Lounds. Frederick Chilton. Abigail Hobbs. Hannibal Lecter.
[ Never having come true doesn't mean it won't, but it isn't Mary's place to argue that. It's always a game of chance, anyhow, and is she really one to dazzle with optimism once the veil had been lifted? Maybe, but not in such patronizing ways.
The topic of Abigail leaves her quiet for a bit as she peeks at the progress of the cupcakes in the oven. Why is he bringing her up now? Obviously she is always on Will's mind, but why ask for her things now? Has Mary lost the right to protect her and hers, or is he reminding her of something tangible that they can still bond over? Is he simply more shaken by Mary's revelation than he had originally seemed? Will is never completely out of sight, even as she sympathizes and finally responds.
If John left...to a fate like Abigail's... ]
I hope that she'll be the exception, then, assuming the city doesn't fall apart in the interim. [ Don't really want Abigail coming back into pestilence. ] In a world where we can cheat death, the thought of you mourning her again is too sad. I wish it were different.
[ But she wishes a LOT of things were different. If wishes were horses? Waste o' time. ]
[Will is rather a dog given the form of a man, has been treated as such (and various sorts of dogs, from good to despicable); patronizing is not the worst she could come across as, not to Will. Arguably, with what she's already revealed today, patronizing might be much better by comparison.]
Can't live a life in mourning. No glory in that. [Flowers!!! The connection springs to him with little basis for it, other than what he's been adding to the lawn outside his place with April. People want to live in glory, and die in glorious ways. Poetry, books, songs, movies, so much to sing about glory, even when it came at great costs. Will didn't want that. Abigail hadn't either. She'd just wanted to live, and what little time she was given was the opposite of glorious.] Maybe she's better off where she is, anyway. Finally got the chance to. Rest.
[What cruelty could possibly be in such a statement is completely missing when it comes from Will's mouth, when he's speaking of Abigail Hobbs. It was nice of her to cheat death, again, but where else is she going to find something that lets her, at last, stop being afraid? Worried? Stop wondering who she might meet on the street, what they'll want from her? Who is friend and who is foe? The stove is hot, Florida is hot, the world around them is heated and mad, but none of that is what has his face flushed, blinking a few times in rapid succession as he goes about putting the dirty in one bowl so he can transfer it all to the sink at the same time. That isn't a reaction to outside circumstances pressing inward, but quite the opposite. Emotional and raw and Will shouldn't have brought this up over cupcakes, they're supposed to be happy. Not sad, sappy, goopy, melting messes.]
[ Is he better off, though? It isn't her place to say such a thing, least of all now, but no matter what he says, she wonders at the entangled trap of family and what it means once you find it. Perhaps it's safer for Abigail to rest. Perhaps it's...healthier for Will to force himself to move on. But that's all...ideal, and nothing about either of their lives fits that image. John was still in the clutches of grief long after Sherlock's death, and if he hadn't returned, Mary isn't entirely certain John ever would have become whole again. (But then if Sherlock hadn't returned, John never would have known the truth, and what bliss.)
She can't help but think of Sherlock and how worrisome it's been knowing he can lock himself away for hours, perhaps days, in his mind palace, given the reach of his imPort abilities. Will isn't Sherlock, but he shares enough similarities that Mary can see him doing the same thing, with or without special powers to enhance the effects. April had hinted at the depths of his despair, but Mary had already gotten a peek. It's all she had needed, really. How he latches onto things like hair ties, the tremble in his voice, it's enough.
Will Graham don't you dare think you ruined this cupcake fest instead of the crazy liar right here, are you insane. Mary is the one who brought the dead back to life and pulled at the threads of his grief. He ought to stick her head in the oven instead of cleaning up. ]
[Cleaning up and fixing things is what he does. Bits of the house falling apart? He can probably get it back in order. Boat motor making a strange noise? He can have it purring like the most contented cat there ever was with a little effort. The messes made with blood, bone, and human remains take more work and aren't exactly his favorite, but he does well enough when he has what he needs to get them done. When he works with a competent team who'll ignore his "different" nature. So what if he's not elbow deep in greasy engine parts or using tools that definitely came from him knowing what he needed instead of guessing? There are dirty pots and pans and utensils and the like, that is the current physical mess he can focus on and take care of, and damn is he going to.]
No. [Stern, perhaps louder than it needs to be, but he's running water and that can do a number on what one hears. Of course, considering Mary's whole stint with this bluebird thing and how easily she became Freddie, Will is of the opinion she is one of those who picks up on everything, regardless of what else is going on. Short of an air raid siren blaring, a plane flying literally feet over the kitchen as they stand in it, and the other rooms being filled with loudly barking dogs and roaring lions? He's probably good to go, with her. But it helps for him to hear that, too. Vibrant and firm, no, he does not wish he was resting. They would never inhume him next to Abigail. There would be no way that their bones could rest near each other, not without that being written somewhere beforehand. If he goes home to rest, his body might still but his spirit and soul won't be quite the same. Could he have survived? Could both of them? Could all four of them have pulled through? He doubts it, and that knife has probably never so thoroughly washed as it is under the care of Will's hands.]
And I'm not just saying that in case you let it slip to someone else, [like April, Frederick, John] I mean it. This place has its ups and downs and its absolutely baffling people, but I like it here and wouldn't risk losing it.
[Which is why he has some problems with certain types, other than the baffling. Go figure.]
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She had shot Sherlock with only one warning, only one step, and even if it wasn't a head shot, hadn't he died, if only for a time? Here she is presenting a truth willingly, and this man may get to walk out the door with his heart still beating. Possibly bearing cupcakes.
Why? Because of how circumstances have been forced to alter in this world? Because she's backed into a corner? With John's (scarce) knowledge of her and the realization of how much worse the other imPorts can be, is that all it takes? Well, it isn't as if she's going so far as to really ask forgiveness or even explain herself. If she had faith, her gut wouldn't twist so, even as her tone cools and she once more becomes stock-still. ]
That I can shapeshift? John, Sherlock...and you. That I know how to point a gun? Same answer. It doesn't ever need to go beyond that.
[ Said as if that's all any of them know. Maybe it is. Is her marriage really built on that much faith? What more that Sherlock and John know still doesn't add up to much by anyone's sane perspective, and she's reluctant to deliver even that much. What might Will deduce on her, just as Sherlock had after being shot in the chest and awakening in the hospital? ]
By now I'm certain others beyond Frederick and Bishop are aware of an imitator running around, but what matters is that this cannot connect back to John. Frederick is not to be trusted with that level of power, and April can't be a part of this. Nobody can.
[ Maybe he can trust April with his world, but Mary can't trust anybody outside of hers. Can she trust Will? Mary tells herself she wouldn't, same as she would anyone. But she does know how to practice something similar, something almost, when no other opportunity is presented. The only alternative is to simply kill him, and even if she was going to be that dramatic, she's aware that imPorts don't always remain dead. No matter who she likes, their demise is always going to be a consideration, even if it's a distant what-if scenario behind a door with a number. ]
John wasn't part of this. He didn't know.
[ Said as if it isn't the first time he's been kept in the dark. Well? She doesn't need John finding out through Will, and she certainly doesn't need him taking the blame for something she did on her own. Will is handling this remarkably well, but that seems to make her more on edge than anything. ]
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He doesn't much care for the idea of keeping things from April, either, but he's done it before. He felt he couldn't tell anyone about Hannibal Lecter, and why would he? Abel Gideon, Freddie Lounds, Frederick Chilton, and Abigail Hobbs all knew more than he did. They had been there, and they kept silent as well. Will Graham being one his most front and center victims/survivors would be an incredibly biased source to get honest information from, so why bother spreading the word?]
Okay. [Almost inaudible, but his lips move and he jerks his head in a nod. She can figure it out. But does she realize what she's doing, he wonders. She says the decision is his, and goes onto make it for him. Is this Mary in her true state, this woman who pretends to give choice while surrounding any other option with bloody animal traps, ready to snap up and crush flesh, muscle, and bone? It is, perhaps fortunately for Mary, a highly effective tactic with Will Graham. It has been used on him before, to great (and disastrous) results. He feels it fortunate, at least, that he's got enough clarity to be aware that's what is going on. Perhaps they're both lucky, in this tapestry that's weaving together even as it unravels.] Are we going to finish these cupcakes or what?
[He's also very used to the idea of stress cooking and baking. Of getting one's appetite back, even while he feels better suited to vomiting everything in his stomach on the table itself.
But okay.
He'll keep her secret.
He's kept it all along, hasn't he?]
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Okay?
[ It's like whiplash, for everything he could still ask or say, he just agrees. It may not be joyously, but it isn't with much fuss like John, nor is it with loud analysis like Sherlock. In his own way, he's allowing her a reprieve she hadn't known she was seeking. Even if she'd been asking for his cooperation, perhaps Mary hadn't actually been expecting it so simply, as proven by her sudden scoff. That much turns into a hushed laugh of disbelief as he brings about cupcakes.
It could be shock! This twit just nods along after she'd agonized about this for weeks? She should kill him out of spite. But recognizing that he has indeed known about her former work for a couple months now and told nobody might be the saving grace above all. He could have sat on it for his own leverage, but he hasn't threatened to use it. So there's that.
That and being blood brothers with Hannibal Lecter. ]
The...double boiler is above the sink. We need to melt the white chocolate and cream.
[ Best give him a weapon first. Hell. ]
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Okay.]
And here I've just been using regular pots or pans for that sort of thing.
[He looks up at her with that same harmless and unassuming face, running his hands up his thighs (that don't do much just yet either) before he pushes off the chair, neither smiling nor frowning. Less miserable this time, though, something bordering on fond. He would never use a fancy cooking or baking tool in a fight if he could help it, because that sounds like something he'd be sorely scolded on. If a fight broke out and it was all he had, that's a different story! But he'd prefer there to be no violence, thank you kindly. He's not infected, has no disease to blame it on. Mary's not infected, either (he hopes). There is no point in getting physical.
Except the plague, and John being away, but that's another type of physical altogether.]
Did Abigail leave anything here, by the way?
[This is totally a normal conversation to have while they're making food. Very healthy. And while Will hasn't been using this specific sort of tool in his own kitchen, Mary may note he still appears to be very familiar with its function and design.
Blood brothers who hung out in the kitchen, one of the Daily Doubles on Jeopardy. You either win or you lose your entire bank, and Alex comes around to stab you in the face.]
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[ What normal conversation! Like nothing at all happened, but it very much did. Even if Mary is also very accustomed to bouncing back or even barrelling on ahead when needed, her worst expectations make it a struggle to accept the ease with which Will cooperates. At least she accepts it more than she had with Sherlock (by his design).
Abigail sounds like an abrupt topic shift while Mary is still circling around Will's lack of relevant questions, but the girl never seems to be that far from his thoughts. It doesn't help put Mary at ease (why ask now?), but it's an answer she can give fairly. If she wished, she could cut all affection out of her voice, but that wouldn't help her any. She's fond of Abigail, and pretending she isn't won't charm Will Graham any. ]
Not really, unless you count her box of Cheez-Its getting stale in the pantry.
[ There's a further moment of considering before she shrugs and adds on while measuring out the white chocolate, keeping Will in her peripheral all the while. There's no hurry, as the cupcakes are still baking. ]
I found a hair elastic of hers when cleaning one of the guest rooms last month. ...Why?
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But a hair elastic. Oh. Oh goodness, he can't get away with that one the same, can he? Like hell is he going to be giving it to April, and he has no intentions to grow his hair that unruly. She asks for reasoning and Will's eyebrows lift. He knows this might sound odd.
He's going to get it out there anyway. Be honest, politely.]
May I have them?
[Why? Because Will has a small shrine of her old belongings, and he assumes that Mary hasn't absorbed Abigail's elastic into her own collection. It's possible she threw it away, even! But if she hasn't...]
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I'll get the elastic for you.
[ Does that answer your question? But before she goes to head for the stairs (why would she worry about leaving Will Graham alone in her kitchen?), Mary twists her lips in thoughtful consideration before explaining further. ]
I was keeping the snacks there for when she returns.
[ DON'T TAKE ABIGAIL'S STALE CRACKERS, Mary will be good. If he looks, he'll even see that half of the shelf is still empty while everything is jampacked, as if purposely reserved. ]
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She's not coming back, you know.
[It's the bitterness of a father who didn't lose his children, but had them taken. The difference between a child who has a legitimate, tragic accident and one that happened because of another person just not doing what they were supposed to. Going out of their way to be dangerous, taking pride in it. In Will's case, he doesn't have only "God" to blame. He knows exactly who is at fault, who should be rotting in jail.]
April keeps to her three months rule, but that's never come true with my people.
[Abel Gideon. Freddie Lounds. Frederick Chilton. Abigail Hobbs. Hannibal Lecter.
His people.
Whether they like it or not.]
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The topic of Abigail leaves her quiet for a bit as she peeks at the progress of the cupcakes in the oven. Why is he bringing her up now? Obviously she is always on Will's mind, but why ask for her things now? Has Mary lost the right to protect her and hers, or is he reminding her of something tangible that they can still bond over? Is he simply more shaken by Mary's revelation than he had originally seemed? Will is never completely out of sight, even as she sympathizes and finally responds.
If John left...to a fate like Abigail's... ]
I hope that she'll be the exception, then, assuming the city doesn't fall apart in the interim. [ Don't really want Abigail coming back into pestilence. ] In a world where we can cheat death, the thought of you mourning her again is too sad. I wish it were different.
[ But she wishes a LOT of things were different. If wishes were horses? Waste o' time. ]
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Can't live a life in mourning. No glory in that. [Flowers!!! The connection springs to him with little basis for it, other than what he's been adding to the lawn outside his place with April. People want to live in glory, and die in glorious ways. Poetry, books, songs, movies, so much to sing about glory, even when it came at great costs. Will didn't want that. Abigail hadn't either. She'd just wanted to live, and what little time she was given was the opposite of glorious.] Maybe she's better off where she is, anyway. Finally got the chance to. Rest.
[What cruelty could possibly be in such a statement is completely missing when it comes from Will's mouth, when he's speaking of Abigail Hobbs. It was nice of her to cheat death, again, but where else is she going to find something that lets her, at last, stop being afraid? Worried? Stop wondering who she might meet on the street, what they'll want from her? Who is friend and who is foe? The stove is hot, Florida is hot, the world around them is heated and mad, but none of that is what has his face flushed, blinking a few times in rapid succession as he goes about putting the dirty in one bowl so he can transfer it all to the sink at the same time. That isn't a reaction to outside circumstances pressing inward, but quite the opposite. Emotional and raw and Will shouldn't have brought this up over cupcakes, they're supposed to be happy. Not sad, sappy, goopy, melting messes.]
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She can't help but think of Sherlock and how worrisome it's been knowing he can lock himself away for hours, perhaps days, in his mind palace, given the reach of his imPort abilities. Will isn't Sherlock, but he shares enough similarities that Mary can see him doing the same thing, with or without special powers to enhance the effects. April had hinted at the depths of his despair, but Mary had already gotten a peek. It's all she had needed, really. How he latches onto things like hair ties, the tremble in his voice, it's enough.
Will Graham don't you dare think you ruined this cupcake fest instead of the crazy liar right here, are you insane. Mary is the one who brought the dead back to life and pulled at the threads of his grief. He ought to stick her head in the oven instead of cleaning up. ]
Do you wish you were...resting, too?
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No. [Stern, perhaps louder than it needs to be, but he's running water and that can do a number on what one hears. Of course, considering Mary's whole stint with this bluebird thing and how easily she became Freddie, Will is of the opinion she is one of those who picks up on everything, regardless of what else is going on. Short of an air raid siren blaring, a plane flying literally feet over the kitchen as they stand in it, and the other rooms being filled with loudly barking dogs and roaring lions? He's probably good to go, with her. But it helps for him to hear that, too. Vibrant and firm, no, he does not wish he was resting. They would never inhume him next to Abigail. There would be no way that their bones could rest near each other, not without that being written somewhere beforehand. If he goes home to rest, his body might still but his spirit and soul won't be quite the same. Could he have survived? Could both of them? Could all four of them have pulled through? He doubts it, and that knife has probably never so thoroughly washed as it is under the care of Will's hands.]
And I'm not just saying that in case you let it slip to someone else, [like April, Frederick, John] I mean it. This place has its ups and downs and its absolutely baffling people, but I like it here and wouldn't risk losing it.
[Which is why he has some problems with certain types, other than the baffling. Go figure.]