[I'm sure. Something conflicted and complicated passes across Giorno's expression at that. Bruno shouldn't have to be sure of everything right now. He should be allowed to just - feel.]
[But he won't, will he.]
[Somehow, that's what makes his eyes sting with unshed tears - and he hides it well, but not perfectly, not by a long shot.]
If I want to help you, will you just push it away? La nostra famiglia è ancora forte, ma siamo deboli soli.
[But he won't, will he.]
[Somehow, that's what makes his eyes sting with unshed tears - and he hides it well, but not perfectly, not by a long shot.]
If I want to help you, will you just push it away? La nostra famiglia è ancora forte, ma siamo deboli soli.
[It feels like I have lost my heart.]
[He cries a little, then. Just a little, a tear or two, and in perfect silence; his breathing is even and calm. One can hardly even tell that he's crying, unless one looks closely, but then again Bruno always does.]
[It feels really unfair, making any kind of comparison, so he tries very hard not to. But that's what he feels, too, underneath it all. There's a cavity in his chest where his heart used to be.]
[The way he leans on Bruno's shoulder, it's as though he's a little afraid one or both of them will shatter when they touch. But neither of them do, in the end. They're both going to survive this, for better or for worse.]
Lo so.
[He breathes in, slow and careful; breathes out in a quiet gust.]
Mi fido di te. Mi fido della mia vita. Tu sei la mia famiglia. Vorrei solo che . . .
[A thousand things. He wishes a thousand things. I wish Trish were here. I wish bad things would stop happening. I wish I could bring the dead back for real. And Izabel would hate him for that.]
Vorrei solo che avrebbe potuto durare.
[A selfish thing to say. But true.]
Io non ti disturberò fino a quando il tempo è di destra. Ma si deve ricordare che ti voglio bene.
[He cries a little, then. Just a little, a tear or two, and in perfect silence; his breathing is even and calm. One can hardly even tell that he's crying, unless one looks closely, but then again Bruno always does.]
[It feels really unfair, making any kind of comparison, so he tries very hard not to. But that's what he feels, too, underneath it all. There's a cavity in his chest where his heart used to be.]
[The way he leans on Bruno's shoulder, it's as though he's a little afraid one or both of them will shatter when they touch. But neither of them do, in the end. They're both going to survive this, for better or for worse.]
Lo so.
[He breathes in, slow and careful; breathes out in a quiet gust.]
Mi fido di te. Mi fido della mia vita. Tu sei la mia famiglia. Vorrei solo che . . .
[A thousand things. He wishes a thousand things. I wish Trish were here. I wish bad things would stop happening. I wish I could bring the dead back for real. And Izabel would hate him for that.]
Vorrei solo che avrebbe potuto durare.
[A selfish thing to say. But true.]
Io non ti disturberò fino a quando il tempo è di destra. Ma si deve ricordare che ti voglio bene.
Edited 2016-01-12 02:35 (UTC)
Sono contento.
[Somehow, with this, it clicks into place. Something, he doesn't know what, something he couldn't put a name to no matter how hard he tried, at least not yet. Just something, a piece of himself that he's been grasping for for so long. A fragment of the Don Giovanna.]
[Not quite absently, he reaches up and pets Bruno's hair, head leaned on his shoulder. Not careful anymore. Just close. Two exhausted children holding each other up.]
Sono fiero di te. Sono sempre fiero di te.
[Somehow, with this, it clicks into place. Something, he doesn't know what, something he couldn't put a name to no matter how hard he tried, at least not yet. Just something, a piece of himself that he's been grasping for for so long. A fragment of the Don Giovanna.]
[Not quite absently, he reaches up and pets Bruno's hair, head leaned on his shoulder. Not careful anymore. Just close. Two exhausted children holding each other up.]
Sono fiero di te. Sono sempre fiero di te.
[It's true, this isn't entirely natural. Even with the comfort he's taking from it, he realizes that. There are so many rules they're meant to be following, rules to do with age and seniority and position, rules that cross over and contradict each other. Those rules make this kind of thing difficult, almost impossible.]
[But so few things that are worth it are easy. He's worked so hard, and for so long, to bend the rules to his own whims. Now that he's in a place where he can remake the rules exactly as he likes them, he's still bending under the weight of standards that should no longer apply to him.]
[No more of that. Bruno's arm around him feels like it's supposed to be there. He won't allow himself to second-guess that. He won't allow himself to second-guess the words, either; Bruno would never, ever lie to him. Not in a million lifetimes.]
[Instead, he just exhales slowly and shakily and nods, with his cheek pressed lightly against Bruno's shoulder.]
Lo so che è. So che lo farà.
[But so few things that are worth it are easy. He's worked so hard, and for so long, to bend the rules to his own whims. Now that he's in a place where he can remake the rules exactly as he likes them, he's still bending under the weight of standards that should no longer apply to him.]
[No more of that. Bruno's arm around him feels like it's supposed to be there. He won't allow himself to second-guess that. He won't allow himself to second-guess the words, either; Bruno would never, ever lie to him. Not in a million lifetimes.]
[Instead, he just exhales slowly and shakily and nods, with his cheek pressed lightly against Bruno's shoulder.]
Lo so che è. So che lo farà.
I know. But I haven't been able to find any good books about them in the library, and the only one I've spent any time with is Ibuki's. I took her back to where I found her, and I found the nest, but she wouldn't go even though I stayed for hours. I'm not sure what to do next.
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