#ch: poppy reed
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REBECCA RITTENHOUSE INSTAGRAM
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Og ch 5
Poppy didn’t talk.
No matter how much Branch talked to her, she wouldn’t respond. That first day, she only watched him.
She didn’t eat any of the jello he offered, so he mostly sat in the chair by her bed, telling her how the village construction and school were going while softly peppering in questions.
“Are you okay? Do you want water? Are you cold? Do you need another blanket?”
He moved around the room to grab her water and a blanket in between stories, opening drawers until he found one.
She looked cold but didn’t make any move to cover herself.
So he draped the blanket over her and tried his best to tuck it around her. She watched him with her eyes but made no other movement.
When the Queen returned, he quietly said his goodbyes to Poppy and promised he’d come back tomorrow before meeting his grandmother at the door and heading home.
This time, it was Branch who was quiet the whole walk home, only shaking his head when his grandmother asked how it had gone.
He bit his lip, trying to keep his emotions in check until he got home—and he did.
But the second they walked through the threshold, the little blue boy put his hands over his eyes and broke down in tears.
“Oh, Branch.”
The Queen guided him to the small couch further in the tent and sat next to him, placing a reassuring hand on his back as he cried it out.
“That must have been scary, seeing her so sad.” He nodded,
the little whines escaping through his fingers as he sobbed into his hands broke the Queen’s heart to hear.
She took a deep breath, wondering if maybe she should have waited longer for the girl to get better before taking Branch to see her.
“I’m sorry,” she said, giving his shoulder a little squeeze.
“I shouldn’t have let you see her like that.”
Vigorously shaking his head ‘no,’ he tried to form words in between breaths,
but only managed to gasp out,
“S-she, sh-she!” before sobbing harder.
“I know, I know,” she murmured, rubbing soothing circles into his back.
She felt frustrated on his behalf. It wasn’t supposed to be like this.
The escape may have prevented their consumption, but the Bergens still received their tithe that Trollstice, clawing it from the very ground their dead had been denied.
In a sick way, it was ironic that the last trolls to die on Trollstice were the only ones to be buried.
She knew there would be an adjustment period for everyone. They needed time to heal and properly grieve their loved ones before they could build a normal life again, especially in the aftermath of their escape.
The loss was somehow worse because of the hope that they had gotten away, that they had cheated their death sentence.
Things were supposed to be good after the escape, but it was only more complicated.
Finding your mate this young was supposed to be a blessing.
But the poor girl had been so severely traumatized; she was practically catatonic. Even if she could recover, she would probably never be the same girl Branch knew.
Not after what Poppy saw...
Looking down at the little blue troll, the Queen decided she would do anything she could to help the once-pink troll, not just for Branch, but because that little girl needed someone in her corner.
Branch and Poppy were still pre-pubescent, so technically their bond as mates could only be confirmed when they entered their first heat.
But it was plain to her—she had also been one of the few blessed to find their mates in childhood—the way Branch looked at Poppy... it’s the same way her Reed used to look at her.
‘Since I have no doubt in their being meant for each other, I guess I should try and have faith they can pull through together too.’
Maybe Branch was meant to help her through this, maybe they were meant to help each other.
She would support them in any way she could.
She didn’t know why things turned out the way they did, but she felt everything happened for a reason, even if the reason wasn’t clear in the moment.
She sat with Branch, comforting him and offering encouraging words until Floyd came home.
The moment her red-headed grandson walked through the entrance and saw the scene before him, she could tell he instantly understood.
Usually, she would have started dinner an hour ago, but Floyd was a very understanding boy.
Sharing a sympathetic look with his grandmother, he tilted his head towards the kitchen, as if to say, ‘Go ahead, I’ll handle things here.’
She nodded, letting Floyd trade places with her. She would start dinner while Floyd talked to Branch.
Twenty minutes later, Branch’s sobs had slowed down to sniffles while Floyd spoke softly at his side.
The two brothers had always been close.
And Floyd always seemed to know what to say to make everyone feel better. He was the calmest of the brothers.
He was a good listener and very sensitive to the emotions of the people around him.
He was born a naturally empathetic troll, but was still young, so she was careful not to push him too hard. The boys were princes, but they deserved some slack. After living their whole lives in that goddamned tree, they earned it. Deserved it.
She saw them murmuring back and forth and was relieved to see that Branch had calmed down enough to speak.
She knew he wouldn’t react well to seeing Poppy, but she also knew it would have been worse to keep him away.
To a troll, a mate was almost something spiritual—it was your other half, your soulmate, everything.
Honestly, she probably couldn’t have kept him away if she wanted to.
But Poppy wasn’t the same girl anymore, and he was mourning the loss of the girl he knew.
When you love someone who was as vibrant as a sunbeam, seeing them drained of everything that made them shine is like someone turning off the lights in a beautiful museum after seeing just the first room.
She wasn’t dead, but she was gone, and it must have hurt him to realize that.
After dinner, Branch went to bed, exhausted from all the crying, while Floyd stayed back to debrief with his grandmother.
“He didn’t take it well.”
“No,” she sighed, setting down the tea she’d just made for herself. “He didn’t take it well.”
They sat in silence for a second, already knowing all there was to say about it.
Seeing Poppy was bound to happen; they knew he wouldn’t react well. She had tried to delay it as much as possible, but she knew he’d get restless eventually and that she wouldn’t be able to keep him away, so it was something that was bound to happen.
It didn’t make it any easier to witness, though.
Floyd was the first to break the silence with a small, amused smile. “He told me about your reaction to his ‘smelling’ her.”
He put air quotations around the word his baby brother had used.
“Oh!” She had forgotten about that! “Oh, God, that’s right!” she chuckled, putting a hand on her mouth as if she found the memory endearing.
“He just walked right up and scented her!”
They both had a little laugh at the innocence of the intimate gesture.
Scenting was a close equivalent to kissing for trolls. Branch, of course, didn’t know that and just did it out of instinct, but that was what made the incident sort of funny and endearing.
Floyd mentioned that he’d explained the gesture to Branch. She knew from her own experience that it would be better for Branch to learn about those things earlier than they were typically taught in school because he’d found Poppy so young, so she made a mental note to get him some books from the small library tomorrow.
After she finished her cup of tea, the two went to bed, but she peeked in on Branch before heading to her room. That boy had a long road ahead of him...
---
From that day on, Branch visited Poppy every day after school. Sometimes he would even stay a little longer after his grandmother was done volunteering, just to read for her a little longer.
She didn’t eat for him the first day, but she did on the third, so Branch would spoon-feed her and talk.
He’d tell her about school and how cool the outside world was. Since she couldn’t walk or go to school yet, Branch, wanting her to see how wonderful the outside world was, had taken to constantly bringing her little things from outside to show her how pretty it was.
On one particular day, he rushed into her room, covered in dirt, having run straight from class with a handful of grass and pretty orangey-pink flowers.
“Poppy!” he panted, “You and this flower have the same name!”
He smiled, delighted by the idea, and held the bouquet out for her to smell.
To his surprise, she took them. She only held them in her lap, but the fact that she accepted them made something like pride swell in his chest.
Sitting in his chair by her bed, he talked with her, catching his breath and putting stickers on anything within reach—including her.
He told her about the letters his older brothers had sent, saying they’d be back any day now, and how excited he was to hear about the different trolls Spruce and JD had met.
He felt like he had slowly made progress with her over the last six months. He read to her quite a bit, and he couldn’t tell you how he knew, but he could feel that somewhere along the six months, she had stopped ignoring him and started listening when he read to her.
She liked *Rapunzel* the best, or at least he thought so. It was the one she seemed to pay the most attention to.
She would also respond to him now—not with words, but he had become very good at reading her body language and micro-expressions.
She now ate when fed, but better for him than anyone else. The nurses had insisted that he didn’t need to do that, but it made him feel good that she preferred him and his care to theirs.
The doctor said her bones were mended, and all her bruises had faded away. She was also managing to stay awake for more than just a few hours a day, gradually extending the time she was conscious. But she still wasn’t walking, and hadn’t since she woke up gray.
He felt his brow pucker a second before he smoothed it out into an easy expression again for Poppy.
He felt like she had made progress, but his grandmother and Dr. Moonbloom didn’t seem to think she’d made enough.
He’d overheard them talking the day before about her, saying she wasn’t getting better quickly enough, and that if she didn’t get some color back soon, things would start to become permanent.
He sighed and hopped out of his chair.
He would think of solutions later.
He was allowed only three hours at the hospital a day, and he didn’t want to waste it.
He climbed onto her bed, careful not to disturb her, and settled next to her on top of the comforter. Sitting cross-legged and facing her, he gently took a section of her hair. His fingers moved with practiced ease, weaving the strands together—his movements tender, his focus entirely on her.
---
Branch couldn’t stop thinking about it. Even after he left the hospital, he couldn’t stop thinking about it.
He was staring at his bedroom ceiling, thinking of what he could do to get her some color back.
Since completing the royal pod four months ago, he and Floyd had stopped sharing a room.
Floyd was just down the hall now, but that didn’t lessen the sense of his absence.
Sighing, he decided he would think of more solutions tomorrow, but for now, he figured he should at least make an attempt at rest.
But as he turned in bed to try and get comfortable, his eyes landed on the pile of books on his nightstand.
Spruce had been carrying Clay’s bag when the tunnels collapsed.
So the brothers had decided to each keep a few things from the bag before it was buried for Clay’s funeral.
Branch had taken a bracelet he now wore around his ankle and a few of his books. He stared at them now—he had read them all a few times over at this point.
He had even read them all to Poppy...
He sat up. The books! Of course!
The prince shot out of bed, grabbed a bag, and started packing.
A few days ago, his class had taken a field trip into the forest where they learned about plants that could make you feel better—herbs.
Just like the magic flower in *Rapunzel*, Grandma said the trolls and the forest were magic.
So maybe he could find a plant that would make her better, just like in the book. Since the trolls and the forest were so connected, maybe it would heal her.
Throwing his bag over his shoulder, he left the pod and set out to the forest. He’d get a few herbs and be back before school started.
He’d help Poppy.
---
He was late.
She only found it odd because Branch hadn’t been late since his first visit six months ago.
She didn’t feel right about it. Poppy didn’t feel much after the tunnel—after she woke up in the hospital, all she wanted to do was go back to sleep. And she did. She slept a lot. It was easier than being awake.
But then she was in her room, looking at the sun shining through the makeshift window, when suddenly she could smell rain,
and when she turned her head, there he was, standing next to her bed—Branch.
She didn’t want to feel comfort at his presence. She didn’t want to feel anything. She was tired of feeling so much.
But the smell of rain put her at ease. Her body would relax, and she’d feel less pain. It was as easy as breathing, being next to him.
She tried for a bit to ignore him at first, but it didn’t last long. After losing her whole family, the idea of getting close to anyone was scary, exhausting. But with each of his visits, the feeling of fear was replaced with comfort.
Eventually, his visits were something she could look forward to. He was the only thing she looked forward to.
Maybe that’s why, for some reason, when she woke up this morning, something felt off... she couldn’t shake the feeling in her gut that something was wrong. When he was 15 minutes late, she knew...
She swung her legs out of bed and pushed herself to stand but fell to the floor.
Her legs felt stiff from lack of use, but she pushed herself up anyway, slowly making her way to the door.
“Anything?”
“No, we’re still looking. My prince, we may need to start looking in the forest.
We’ve searched the entire village, but he is nowhere to be found.”
Poppy’s ears twitched back towards the window at the sound of the doctor’s voice.
Who was she talking to?
She stumbled to the other side of the room and peeked out the window before quickly ducking out of sight.
It was the doctor and the eldest prince, John Dory, and he looked very upset. She lay down, putting her ear to the bottom of the tent flap to hear the conversation outside better.
They looked upset.
She remembered Branch saying the eldest brothers would be coming back soon. She didn’t realize it would be THIS soon.
“Someone said they saw a blue troll headed east past the lake this morning.”
Branch...
“Then let’s get a search party out there now.”
The doctor agreed.
“I’ll come too, just give me a second to tell my staff. If he does come back, he’ll probably stop here first.”
JD nodded and headed towards the village to start a search party.
The doctor ran inside to let the nurses in the back know to keep an eye out for the prince. But as she ran past the little gray troll’s room, she stopped abruptly in her tracks.
‘No...’
She took one slow step back.
‘No way.’
She quickly turned back on her heel, running.
‘There was no way,’ the doctor thought.
But when she ran into Poppy’s room,
She found the bed with the sheets thrown back.
Her bed and room were empty.
“Oh, fuck.”
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Flower Child, Ch. 18 (”Abyss”)
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i.
The door that led into Room 11812 was already partially cracked when Blue Diamond arrived in front of it the next morning. Lost, hesitant, adrift, perpetually undone, she simply stared at it for a long while, sized it up, reified it into yet another monolith she would have to confront.
For she was surrounded by monoliths.
All the time.
They towered over her.
Mocked her.
Grief and ghosts and all those other inlaid, ingrained fears, carved deep into the marrow of her bones, muscle memory now. She was scared of everything, really: the continuance of life, the permanence of death, the human capacity for endurance, the inhuman throes of her nightmares. And how these nightmares were sometimes, maybe even oftentimes, waking dreams nowadays, stalking her far beyond the confines of a bed that was much too big for her. She was afraid of forgetting Pink Diamond and replacing her, caring for Steven Universe and losing him. Telling Yellow Diamond that she loved her. Showing it. Proving that she did. Never doing it in the end precisely because she was so afraid. (Of what? She scarcely could articulate in the labyrinthine abyss of her mind, where everything was guttural and murky and raw.) Consigning their marriage to the same grave where their daughter laid, the memory of their once great love dressed in funeral shrouds…. She was afraid of empty halls and empty penthouse suites and empty rooms where dust laid thickly on furniture that would never be touched again. Ratty hoodies, diamond quilts, pink sticky notes reminding dead twenty-one year olds to study for upcoming tests. She was afraid of living and afraid of dying, afraid of happiness and afraid of pain. She feared mornings, and she feared nights. Doorbells, sleeping pills, good days, bad days, her very shadow, her own wasted reflection. (Because fundamentally, Blue Diamond was afraid of herself most of all.)
She wasn’t particularly afraid of doors—because most of the time, a door was just a door after all—but she was afraid of this particular door on the sixth floor of a hospital. More simply, she was afraid of what was behind it. Simpler still, she was afraid of who laid in that hospital bed. Afraid of all the unspoken things that had simmered quietly in the space between them for years upon distant, aching years...
So, she simply stood there.
Lost.
Hesitant.
Adrift.
Perpetually undone.
She made a monolith out of a door.
Voices seeped from behind the narrow gap, rising and falling together in a conversation that didn’t quite make sense, try though she did to piece the snippets into a context that she could understand. Blue braced both of her hands upon the head of her cane as she leaned forward to listen, a long strand of her silvery hair falling listlessly between her eyes, curling just over her nose.
How terribly her heart beat.
How loud.
Her fingers shivered; they simply ached.
“... ouch, dammit! Don’t poke me so hard,” Yellow Diamond snapped, her abrasive voice loud, clear, unmistakable, ringing.
(She was always so pleasant to be around in the morning.)
“Then you should quit squirming around so much, Mrs. Diamond,” a voice that she recognized as belonging to Dr. Reed replied, as amused as her patient was irate. “It’s just a needle.”
“Yes, well—it’s too early in the morning for me to be especially happy about being prodded like a cow.”
“Mm,” the doctor made a noncommittal noise at the back of her throat as she continued to work, noisily shifting invisible materials around.
“So, when will I get these results back?” Yellow asked, affecting a tone that was passably casual to anyone who didn’t know her, who was unaware that she clipped her consonants more shortly than usual when she was tense, scared, strained.
“A couple of hours if I had to wager. The lab’ll want to be thorough.”
“Naturally.”
“And once we get those results back—if they say what I think they will, of course—then we’ll have to run through the whole gamut of other procedures: urological assessments, medical histories, blood pressure tests, cancer screenings, chest x-rays, EKGs... it’ll be a long process.”
“Sounds like it,” Yellow returned in that same punctuated voice, and then the two women lapsed into silence as the ground revolted beneath Blue’s feet, simply eroded.
And she was suddenly falling at the same time that she was perfectly upright, a swaying pillar tethered only to the facticity of her cane. She clung to it all the more tightly, fingers whitening from the beds of her nails downwards; it was the only bulwark she had against total collapse.
Annihilation.
Ruin.
All these tests?
What were they for?
She furrowed her silvery brow and desperately thought back to her conversation with Dr. Reed just yesterday; nothing about it had suggested that something was seriously wrong with Yellow, except a few fractures and lacerations that would clear up with time and rest... so what reasonable line of logic led from a minor car accident to cancer screenings and chest x-rays? What had happened in the unaccounted for hours when Blue had been away?
She closed her eyes as nausea suddenly rushed up the cylinder of her throat, sickness invading all her delicate senses.
The answer seemed to loom darkly ahead—only a door push away.
“Alright, Mrs. Diamond,” the doctor sighed, “I’m going to get these to the lab. I’ll draw up your discharge papers soon, too...”
Yellow must have made some sort of nonverbal reply because Blue didn’t have time to recover her face as the cracked door suddenly flung open, breaking the final divide between everything she thought she understood and all the awful things that she apparently didn’t.
“Mrs. Diamond, oh, hello! Good mornin’!”
Her wiry eyebrows hoisted high above her thin glasses, Dr. Reed looked equally surprised to see Blue Diamond standing just outside the door. The medical tray she bore in her arms jumped a little as she did, shaking a few test tubes that were filled with dark crimson.
But Blue was impatient, eager, scared most of all. (She was always scared.) Her hooded eyes involuntarily slid from the harried doctor to the test tubes to the impressively cut figure just beyond Dr. Reed’s shoulder.
For Yellow Diamond, wearing her favorite pair of silken pajamas like royal regalia, sat upon the edge of her hospital bed, simply staring at Blue from widened eyes, her cracked lips parted slightly, every line etched across her face a livid, pulsing scar.
It was an expression of contradictions, of paradoxes, of dichotomies: tender at the same time that it was strained, vulnerable and equally forbidding.
Yellow averted her gaze first, a dull flush suffusing her sharply hewn cheeks. When she turned away, the sunlight pouring in from the window eclipsed her features behind the curtain of its flaxen reach.
“Good morning, Dr. Reed,” Blue murmured, painfully wrenching her attention back to the more immediate woman. “I see you have been… busy.”
She glanced questioningly at the tray of test tubes again, but just as the doctor opened her mouth to respond, Yellow got there first, cutting across her with cold precision.
“She was just leaving,” she said pointedly, still not looking their way. She brought her left arm up—the one enmeshed in a brace—to absentmindedly skim the right where her sleeve was meticulously rolled up at the elbow, where a long piece of gauze had been nearly wrapped around the joint. “Right, Doctor?”
It was a clear dismissal, blunt and unsubtle, a maneuver of clear avoidance, of keeping those strange, private words in the dark. Blue imagined it was a tactic that would have worked exceptionally well on Poppy or Livia or one of their various other employees besides whom Yellow had already intimidated into submission, but Dr. Reed didn’t seem to be especially frazzled by Yellow Diamond at all—unbothered by her elevated status, impervious to the harsh way with which spoke, as though every word was a finely calibrated weapon. She only resigned herself with a meaningful sigh that Blue couldn’t quite miss, her wire-rimmed glasses slipping incrementally upon the bridge of her nose.
“I suppose I was,” she smiled grimly, adjusting her tray more securely in her arms. Blue counted the scarlet tubes. There were four in all. “Be sure to eat that. cookie, Mrs. Diamond”—she called over her shoulder, as calculatingly sweet as Yellow was acerbic—“and it was nice to see you again, Mrs. Diamond.”
Blue stepped to the aside to allow the doctor passage. They exchanged a final nod, charged with unspoken significance, and then, just like that, Dr. Reed was gone.
And finally, they were alone.
Blue and Yellow Diamond.
Once upon a time, this had been one of their most treasured sensations in the world.
To be alone.
With one another.
In the confines of a room.
Oh, how Blue’s slender hands had once known Yellow as intimately as they had known her own body. The curvature of her sharp jawbone. The tender column of her pulsing neckline. The feeling of their hands together, gently intertwined. Spiny knuckles. Soft palms. Brushing thumbs.
And now, eight feet stood between them.
Seven once Blue timidly dared to step into the doorway.
Merely six once she made an awkward movement to close the door behind her.
And neither of them especially knew how to breach the space between them.
The distance.
The gulf.
Yellow seemed to have finally noticed that she was massaging the place where the doctor had drawn her blood because she suddenly stopped, self-conscious, wrenching her left hand away from the spot. But the gauze was still there, wrapped around her bony elbow tightly, advertising its unspoken secret like a flag at half-mast.
“You’re having tests done,” Blue stated.
It was as bold as it was quiet.
The loudest accusation in an otherwise silent room.
“They’re nothing,” Yellow replied immediately, trying for a nonchalance that didn’t quite land. “It’s nothing. Just routine stuff.”
The lie landed between them, too, with an odd, dull plunk, and Blue felt the beginnings of something other than fear coil in the pit of her stomach for the first time all morning. A burning sensation—stinging, raw.
She squeezed her cane again tightly and absently thought that it wouldn’t surprise her if her fingers came away with indents from where she gripped the metal.
“You were drunk… you were in an accident, Yellow,” she whispered, her words acquiring an icy edge. They lashed. They lunged. They hurt. They were intended to hurt. “Are you sure there’s something you’re not telling me?”
On the ropes, cornered—she hated being cornered—Yellow’s features suddenly hardened, her nose upturning, mouth calcifying into its trademark sneer. If Blue Diamond’s cane was her defense, then Yellow Diamond’s snarl was her weapon, sharp as any saber or sword.
“You’re being paranoid, Blue—even more so than usual,” she scoffed, fingertips digging into the sheets beneath her hands. “It wasn’t as though I caused the accident. I wasn’t even driving!”
“Then why has Dr. Reed ordered such an extensive battery of tests for you? Can you answer me that at least?” She insisted, now shrill, now angry, now hoarse, now unknotted, soon to be undone—her throat wrenched with its own rage. Tears burned the corners of her eyes, gathering like rushing rivers down the skeletal curves of her cheeks. “I’m your wife, Yellow Diamond, and you—”
“And I should what exactly?” Yellow interrupted, laughing so mirthlessly that the sound was feral, almost inhuman. “Give you yet another reason to fall apart for four years? You barely survived the last time. I barely survived watching you, Blue. I—“
But she stopped short.
She realized that she had said too much.
And six feet became six hundred feet as the two women stared at each other across the empty tiles, as the words that Yellow had growled registered to them both.
Neither of them had barely survived Blue’s total dissolution.
Both of them.
Together.
Alone.
They were both so utterly alone.
“I’m sorry,” Yellow exhaled, the fight in her voice punctured. Leaking. Drained. “I… I’m—“
But what exactly she was, even she didn’t seem to know. Prodigious marshal of words that she was, she was clearly at a loss for words, her mouth quavering with its own forced silence. Yellow abruptly looked away again, and the sunlight threw the stitches across her cheek in sharp relief, the redness of them, the rawness.
Painful to even look at.
How much more painful were they then to bear?
How many other wounds besides had her wife collected in all these awful, unspooling years? Not even simply the visible ones, but all the other sundry hurts, too. The lines beneath her hawklike eyes. Her perpetual coldness, wrapped like impenetrable armor around her skin. The very way that she spoke these days, as though each word was a marionette jerked by some strict taskmaster’s violent strings.
In the night, when she was alone in that master bed that had never been intended for just one, Blue didn’t have to look at these things, didn’t have to acknowledge that there was a reason that the door to the study was perpetually cracked open, didn’t have to wonder about how her utter contempt for life reflected on others because fundamentally, there was no one other than herself; it was her and her alone.
During the day, she didn’t have to care.
Time stretched ad infinitum all around her, slipping, always slipping away.
And she remained in the mire of her own head.
Stuck.
Broken.
Sinking.
Sunken.
Gone.
“So, please, Blue Diamond… please don’t look away, Steven Universe had whispered, indicting her, condemning her entire modus operandi with seven simple words as he laid in that hospital bed, dying for everyone to see.
She had looked away from Pink Diamond, and now Pink Diamond was dead.
She had almost looked away from Steven Universe.
Even still, even after all that they had ever been through together—and they had been through quite a lot—Blue Diamond was looking away from her wife even now.
Fool, masochist, coward.
She was, she was, she was—all of these things and very likely more.
Drowning.
Save me.
Spiraling.
Always.
Sinking, sunken, gone.
But the corrective, Steven Universe implied with every word and kind deed, wasn’t in the recognition of her problem; it wasn’t even in the actual acknowledgment that there needed to be a change.
It was in action and reaction.
It was in change itself.
A sickly boy could extend a flower to her in the cemetery, but she had to be the one to accept its grace.
She had to be the one to not look away.
Six feet, not six hundred feet.
Please, Blue Diamond… please don’t look away.
Swallowing thickly, Blue forced herself to gain perspective in that tiny hospital room, narrowing the world to just the two of them and the few strips of tile which stood between them.
Six feet.
So close and yet so far.
(Their daughter was six feet under the ground.)
“We apologize to each other all the time,” Blue murmured, her voice lilting softly in her accent, “and yet… not at all. How many times have we hurt each other, Yellow? How many times have we had to repent before doing it all over again?”
“So many times,” Yellow returned automatically, and her voice was quiet, laced only with the fading dregs of bitterness. Her knuckles were white where she continued to clench the sheets balled in her fists. “Because I am sorry—every damn time, Blue. I don’t mean to hurt you. I don’t want to hurt you. Hell, but I—”
As her voice rose, it was just as quickly stifled.
Choked.
A single tear glanced down the consummate businesswoman’s sharply angled face, and perhaps it was the most visible sign of her defeat that she didn’t immediately make a move to scrub it away, to pretend as though it had never existed.
And perhaps it was this gesture, or lack of a gesture, that finally did it for Blue Diamond above all.
That taught her what she needed to do.
She moved forward, one halting footstep over another, the hem of her long dress sweeping across the clinically white ground.
Clank.
Five feet.
Clank.
Four feet.
Clank.
Alerted by the telltale clangor of the cane, Yellow Diamond abruptly jerked her chin upwards, her lined eyes wide with horror and disbelief, with fear, with apprehension, with confusion, and something else, too—something almost indefinable because it had been a long time since Blue had recognized the expression in her wife’s chiseled face.
Had seen it.
Had noticed it.
Named it and reciprocated it.
Yearning, that irresistible rush of longing.
It shone painfully in her eyes, a drowning man’s golden flare shot into the dark.
Clank.
Three feet.
Clank.
Two.
“Blue, what are you—”
Clank.
One.
Scarcely twelve inches stood between them now, the air quiet, unnervingly, unnaturally still.
For everything was on a tightrope, the line just ready to snap.
Between them, individually, over twenty years of history were stored in the shared memories of their bodies, and for a moment, if only for a fleeting second, Blue felt as though if she could only reach out and touch Yellow in just the right place, that the world would just as suddenly right itself on its tilted axis, and everything would make sense once again and forevermore. They would be reconciled, reunited, restored, all of their damages undone, and they would know each other intimately, just by touch alone. They would be able to pick up where they last stopped, somewhere in the darkness, on a road that went by the wayside so long ago. Maybe, at long last, they would even join hands.
But, no.
That was simply naïveté.
Childlike belief.
A dream.
Touching Yellow Diamond would not change the fact that their daughter was dead and that four years of grief had nearly destroyed the both of them; touching Yellow Diamond was not an apology; it wouldn’t even be an adequate excuse. The touch, if such a thing were to exist, would only be a gesture, a microscopic movement towards what had heretofore been the impossible.
The beginnings of a bridge.
And one goddamn awful gulf.
But it was a start.
And that was what mattered, right?
Yes, Blue Diamond thought to herself.
Please.
Closing her eyes against the sudden vertigo—the fear, the terror, the rush—she slowly leaned over into the darkness and gently pressed her lips against Yellow Diamond’s forehead, exhaling softly as the stalwart general tensed beneath the touch, deathly still.
“I’m sorry, Blue.”
Her voice shook, a pillar cut off at its foundation, sunken to its knees.
Blue gingerly brought her hands up so that they were encircling her wife’s head, her tousled hair, the tips of her ears, her temples…
“I’m so sorry,” Yellow repeated simply; her voice cleaved itself in two; she was insisting on an apology, as though it was absolutely necessary for them to proceed.
And it was.
But so, too, was this.
“I know,” Blue whispered as Yellow’s shoulders began to silently shake. In response, in return, because she wanted to, because she desperately needed to, she began to absently skim her thumb through the woman’s hair.
“I’m sorry, too.”
Three words still hung—unspoken—in the sterile air.
Suspended.
On the tips of fearful tongues.
ii.
Priyanka brought them all back to the slaughterhouse again because there was nowhere else left to go. There were five of them in total, so they couldn’t very well have their daily harrowing conversation out in the hallway. They were adults, and Steven was a child, Steven was fourteen, so they couldn’t baldly discuss his mortality in his hospital room, where he laid in a bed, hooked up to so many whirring machines. Her office was cramped, and the chapel was somber. The cafeteria was too noisy, the hospital’s atrium just the same.
And so, that left only one option.
The conference room on the fourth floor.
The slaughterhouse.
They all took seats at that long, long table and did their best not to look at each other, at the griefs laid bare in all of their tired faces.
“I’m sorry,” Priyanka said abruptly, “for yesterday. I got your hopes up. I got my own up, and I... I should have been more circumspect.”
She stared at her lined hands, at how they were templed neatly upon the smooth surface of the table. Even sidled up next to each other, brushing, her palms felt bitingly cold.
“I knew better, and that—irrefutably—is on me.”
“Aw, come off it, Doc,” Amethyst shrugged dully from the other side of Greg. “You couldn’t have known.”
“You told us best yourself, Priyanka,” Pearl agreed, her voice an almost passable imitation of prim. She was sitting in the chair opposite to Amethyst, delicately massaging her temples with the tips of her long fingers. “That damage wouldn’t have shown up on the scans... we don’t fault you for that.”
“We won’t,” Garnet added pointedly, never moving her bicolored gaze away from the empty air just above Greg’s shoulder.
“We would never,” Greg finished kindly, and when Priyanka dared to look up at him—he was sitting to her immediate left—she was appalled to see a weak smile quivering on his bearded mouth. Of all the things she didn’t deserve, a smile was high on that list which seemed to grow longer with every passing day that Steven Universe was in her care.
“You’re all being far too nice to me,” she insisted in that same blunt tone, though she knew it was a losing battle, four against one, the weapons of their affection all drawn. “I made that child—I made all of you—a promise. And doctors don’t make promises.”
Take care of my baby for me... please.
You have my word.
“Not unless they’re arrogant,” she concluded coldly, glancing away. “Foolish.”
And she was a fool—assuredly. A jester in a white lab coat. All she needed was the hat. In the slaughterhouse, she half-demanded that the people around her admitted to it, that the victims of her fault had their chance to cleave her apart on the altar, too.
But because they were kind and good and everything that was compassionate in the world, not a single one of them did.
Garnet even reached over and briefly placed a warm hand on Priyanka’s arm.
“It’s a good thing you’re neither then.”
And of course, here was yet another thing she didn’t deserve—a consolatory touch—but the doctor did not have the heart to shake it off, not now—not when there were dark circles beneath Garnet’s eyes that spoke to yet another sleepless night in a long row of likely many.
“Yes, well, at any rate”—she hurried away from the subject, desperate to escape their kindness, goodness, their sympathetic gazes—“I’ve called you here to give a progress report… we potentially have another donor candidate… a live donor this time.”
Priyanka enunciated each word as though she was announcing the presence of a ticking time bomb, and it registered as much in the faces of her captive audience. Garnet withdrew her hand quickly, as though stung, and they all stared at the nephrologist, each and every one of them, with a naked disbelief that was a far cry from the unadulterated joy of yesterday’s declaration. They had been briefly happy, and then they’d been so quickly, so mercilessly burnt; it was no wonder then that they were skeptical.
It was painfully obvious that they were still licking their damn wounds.
“A patient at this very hospital,” she continued haltingly, precise in every word. She had to be careful here not to let something slip up, not to betray a word that would drive the blades sticking into these people’s chests in just one inch more. She wanted to be fastidious this time; she intended to be sure. “Their blood type is likely a match for Steven’s, but we’re checking again just to make sure… and even if that’s a certainty, there are so many other tests besides that we’ll have to do just to make sure their body is healthy enough to undergo a transplant… it could take weeks…”
She spoke into thick silence, excruciating to the last as each word was wrenched free from her teeth in some poor facsimile of her usual brusque fashion.
Pearl and Garnet exchanged a pregnant look across the table, but it was Amethyst who spoke the meaning aloud; she was always the one who seemed to be the best at translating what everyone was secretly thinking into words, what they were all too fearful to say.
“So we shouldn’t get our hopes up yet, huh?” She asked candidly. “That’s what you’re saying… isn’t it?”
“Something to that effect, yes,” Priyanka returned with a slow nod of her head. “I just don’t want to… I would rather not…”
But she struggled to find the right words, to strangle all her emotions into sentences that didn’t complicate the professionalism to which she was called.
Because she couldn’t break down.
She couldn’t flinch.
She was the doctor in the room for goodness’s sake, and that meant something.
But again, Amethyst stepped in so she didn’t have to—blunt, plain, merciful.
“… hurt him again,” she mumbled, her lavender hair forming a curtain around her lowered head. The young woman swiped her arm roughly across her face in a gesture that was lost on precisely no one. “Yeah, I guess that’s for the best…”
The ensuing silence was somehow worse than the last.
It seemed to chafe at them all, rubbing their skins raw.
Greg Universe shifted in his chair.
He looked less man than mountain, carved ruggedly against a bleak, gray sky—hunched in on himself, avalanched, collapsing all over.
(When she’d first met the man some fifteen years ago, he’d still had all of his hair.)
(A kid having a kid.)
“He hasn’t said more than a few words today, Dr. M,” the mountain whispered, his voice eroding in all the right places, crumbling. “He barely even looks at us.”
Priyanka didn’t know what to say.
She wasn’t naturally warm like Maisie Reed.
Wasn’t soft.
Wasn’t encouraging.
Being a doctor didn’t require any of those epithets, even though she knew cerebrally, intimately, that being a human did.
“It’s hard being sick,” she finally said.
It was the easiest way to utter an even harder truth.
(Sometimes, her patients found it unbearable.)
iii.
“And Archimicarus preened his feathers haughtily, all the while keeping one amber eye on Captain Bonham, whose apparent warmth wasn’t enough to stop the falcon from being wary of the witch’s eccentricities: the dual pistols she wore in the holsters on either side of her waist, the long knife handle jutting just above the ribs of her corset, and most ominously of all, the necklace she wore around her neck—a leather cord threaded through the skull of a baby bird,” Connie read aloud, adopting her most suspenseful voice for one of the most tense chapters in the book—Lisa and Archimicarus meeting Valentine Bonham, famed pirate witch of the jewel-bright seas, and her serpentine familiar Scyllane.
Of course, Valentine would prove to be one of Lisa’s most beloved companions by the end of the book, a swashbuckling mentor with a semi-tragic backstory, a kind of mother figure who had a penchant for committing petty theft and tax fraud against the despotic king.
But Steven didn’t know that yet.
“Skyllane,” Connie continued, “her silvery scales glimmering beneath the midday sun, hissed her amusement at Archimicarus’s obvious discomfort as she coiled herself sinuously around Valentine’s neck. Show off, the falcon thought savagely…”
Her mouth twitched into a reflexive smile at this part, nostalgic at Archimicarus’s occasional petty asides, and she looked up automatically, hoping to see the same amusement reflected in the face of her one-person audience… but Steven… Steven obviously wasn’t feeling it.
He didn’t seem like he was feeling much of anything, really.
When she’d come in with her mother that morning, he had tried to hide it, insisting that she open The Unfamiliar Familiar again, that they could pick up where they had last left off like everything was fine and good and normal and dandy.
But it wasn’t.
And perhaps pretending was only adding insult to injury, salt to an already agonizing wound.
Her mother’s famously steady hands had been shaking all day. They shook around around the leather of her steering wheel; they shook around the circumference of her coffee tumbler; they shook as she fumbled with her keys to lock the sedan’s door. She dropped them. Connie picked them up and didn’t comment on the incident, just as her mother didn’t comment on the event except to proffer a perfunctory thank you. And still, her mother’s hands continued to shake as she ushered Connie through the double doors that led into the Truman Ward, where only the nephrologist’s most dire patients were hospitalized.
On the ride to the hospital that morning, she had laid out the bare bones as best and well as she could to her daughter—Steven had been going to get kidneys, and then he just as suddenly wasn’t.
Steven’s life had miraculously stretched before him, and then the ribbon was abruptly, cruelly cut.
And his heart is tired, Connie, her mom had whispered—very quietly, with evident strain. As though she was scarcely able to comprehend it herself. So tired. And his lungs are doing their best to keep up…
Connie did not think it was necessary to ask what happened to tired hearts.
Staring at Steven, who wasn’t staring at her but rather at a fixed point upon the ceiling, she instinctively understood that there was only one thing tired hearts could do.
And that was shatter.
Break.
“Hey… Steven?” She asked tentatively, replacing the straw wrapper bookmark in the place where she had last left off. (She didn’t quite close the book—not yet. There was a finality in that action, mundane though it was, that suddenly scared her.) “Are you… okay?”
Seconds dripped before anything happened. Surrounded by a nest of tangled wires and tubes, Steven was deathly still in their embrace, less subject than object, less object than tangible ghost. From her vantage point—the chair next to his bed—she couldn’t see his face, the expression in it, perhaps even the lack of one. But she observed the way that his right hand laid feebly on top of his stomach, fingers lightly curled into a ball. And she saw the feeble rise and fall of his chest, how it stuttered every so often with each arrhythmic movement that found its companion in a staccato beat on his heart monitor.
And here was yet another thing that scared the twelve-year old.
She surmised that all these signs and symbols had something to do with finality, too.
Endings.
She hated those.
Sometimes, when she was reading a really good book, she would stop just before the last chapter to steel herself for what was to come.
“Yes,” came a mechanical reply. “Just tired…”
“I can imagine,” Connie said. (She couldn’t imagine it all. She could barely reconcile that this was the same boy she had laughed and laughed with only so many days ago on the first floor of this very hospital. He had smiled at her so kindly, eyes shining with their own paradoxical aliveness. And she’d thought to herself, even then, how miraculous he surely was, how extraordinary.) “We can stop right here for now if you want to take a nap or something…?”
“I don’t like naps,” Steven immediately said in that same colorless tone, and yet, there was a slight edge to his voice that wasn’t exactly anger, but rather defiance, argumentative, defensive, self-directed—as though it was aimed towards himself. His chubby fingers tensed on his stomach, crumpling the paisley-studded fabric there.
Connie did not think it was necessary to ask why he didn’t like naps.
Or, maybe, it was entirely necessary.
Maybe it was one of those very human statements that required an equally human reply: comfort, consolation, concern.
But she lapsed into silence rather than pursue it, the weight of her book pressing heavily upon her knees, the weight of the moment overwhelming her in all of her twelve-year-oldish-ness. She glanced emptily at the page where the spine was cracked open and realized that they hadn’t even reached the halfway point yet.
There were still so many pages to go.
Hundreds.
“… how does it end?”
But now, very suddenly, with all the air of a startled cat, she glanced up, and saw that Steven had painstakingly tilted his head in her direction. And he was simply watching her, the expression in his dark eyes impenetrable and distant, even though he was so close, quite close enough to reach out and actually touch.
Her literary mind worked ahead of her.
There was a metaphor in there somewhere.
“The chapter?” Connie asked, wondering if he was implicitly asking her to keep reading.
“No.” The line of Steven’s pale mouth barely moved. “The book.”
It registered with her immediately—he was asking for an entirely different thing besides.
Cold collapsed down her spine, settling somewhere in her stomach.
Icy.
Hard.
“Don’t be silly,” she returned numbly, as though it was just a game they were still playing. It was not in fact a game. It wasn’t even close to one. “You’ll have to wait for me to read the rest of the book to find out. We haven’t even reached Chapter Eight yet.”
There were twenty-one chapters total.
Epilogue included.
Steven was silent for a long time, but never entirely; the various machines invading him did all of the talking in his place: whirring, beeping, stuttering on.
“I guess we better keep going then.”
“Yeah…”
Connie removed her straw wrapper bookmark again and began to read.
She read very quickly now, as though something depended upon it.
iv.
A little before noon, Dr. Maheswaran briefly came in to disconnect Steven from the portable dialysis machine and send Connie downstairs to be picked up by her father for tennis practice. Garnet watched him as he seemingly watched nothing. He looked away when the nephrologist gently disconnected the machine’s tubing from the central line grafted into his neck. He closed his dark eyes when she replaced the oxygen mask over his mouth for one of those quick albuterol treatments. (Ever since his episode last night, his breathing had been a little too stilted for the doctor’s liking, a little too short.) He barely opened them again when Connie said her tentative goodbye, placing a hand on Steven’s arm as Dr. Maheswaran placed a consoling arm around her daughter’s shoulder.
Through his mask, he couldn’t say anything, so he only blinked slowly, the shadows turning beneath his eyes starkly pronounced. He coughed once. The feeble sound rattled across his chest.
It shivered his whole body.
It shivered the entire room.
When Connie withdrew her hand, fear flashed across her face.
(For she was shivering, too.)
The Maheswarans left, and Garnet and Steven were left alone in that tiny hospital room that was filled with golden sunlight. It leaned through the window with a light, mocking smile, teasing a warmth that the gym trainer couldn’t feel as she continued to watch Steven.
Vigilantly.
With no little obsession.
Afraid to miss something.
(Maybe even more afraid to stay.)
Hunched over in the uncomfortable chair next to his bed, she curled the fingers of her right hand over her clenched left fist, gingerly rubbing her knuckles, and she stared plainly at the punctuated rise and fall of his chest as albuterol vapor leaked beneath his mask, spiraling into the air like fading smoke. The machine hissed pneumatically, nearly overwhelming the sound of Steven’s beating heart, which was measured out in shrill noise, clangorous noise.
Beep…
Beep...
Beep…
Garnet hated this sound and she was simultaneously desperate to keep hearing it.
A nurse came in some ten minutes later to remove the mask and readjust the oxygenated cannulas in their former place, gently threading the tubes around Steven’s ears, maneuvering the tiny nubs into his nose. He kept his eyes closed, but Garnet was almost positive that he wasn’t sleeping.
It was subtle, but she knew the signs, having studied them night after night for almost nine months now—all those times she had curled up beside him in bed, resting her chin on top of his curly, black hair, keeping a vigilant eye out for all the demons she couldn’t exactly see.
The shadows that lurked around and about them never quite materialized into foes she could punch, kick, or destroy, so she memorized all the telltale signs of his aliveness instead, committing each trait to memory as though her own sanity depended on it.
The slight furrow in his dark brow.
The twitch in his nose.
The grim press of his lips.
(When he was truly asleep, he had the tendency to snore, mouth lazily lolled open in unguarded torpor.)
But the nurse didn’t know him, so they only said poor kiddo before leaving too, and the room suddenly felt so much more vacant without the hiss of the albuterol to fill all the empty crevices—the silence, the all-consuming nothingness, the barefaced, omnipresent pain.
Beep…
Beep…
Beep…
Steven slowly opened his eyes as the nurse’s footsteps died away from the room.
And Garnet watched him as he seemingly watched nothing, as he stared, very quietly, at the ceiling, without so much as moving a limb. She drank every micro-gesture in, as though every micro-gesture meant something in the wide cosmos of the universe. Every breath became consequential in this barebones theology, a butterfly’s wings rippling through space and time to matter in ways both big and small.
It mattered—fundamentally—that Steven continued to breathe.
Beep…
Beep…
Beep…
“Garnet?” He asked quietly. His voice was small, weak—the mewling rasp of an injured animal. She thought fleetingly of Cat Steven, of how they had found that tiny, defenseless kitten shivering in the pouring rain. If only Garnet could scoop his namesake into her strong arms just the same and keep him safe, holding him very quietly, very gently, against her chest.
“… yes, Steven?”
“Was my mom… was she ever scared, too?”
The question was simple enough, and it simply unmoored her.
Skewered her through.
Because they didn’t really talk about Rose.
Not really.
They referenced her obliquely, in passing mention, if they absolutely had to; her portrait loomed above the door leading into the beach house; every year, on her birthday, they laid flowers upon her grave and tried not to think about young she would have been had she never died.
And yet, here Steven was, trespassing that unspoken rule and doubling down upon it.
As little as they ever discussed Rose Quartz, they touched upon her illness even less.
So many memories.
Too painful.
Too raw.
Never healed, buried deep within their skins, buried six feet under the ground.
“…I think she might have been,” Garnet answered slowly, “but I can’t say for sure. She was good at pushing down her feelings for us… for our sakes.”
Which in turn made her an excellent leader.
(And an inscrutable friend.)
Steven seemed to silently grapple with this for a few moments, his expression complex, as though there were cloud shadows roaming across his eyes and mouth, threatening rain but never delivering.
“I dreamt of her last night,” Steven said, an explanatory note in his voice. Justificatory. He wasn’t bringing up his mother for just any random reason. “My mom.”
Garnet’s heart shriveled somewhere inside her throat.
“Mm.” She attempted to be calm anyway. “Tell me about it.”
“We… we were in a pink room full of swirling clouds,” the child whispered. “We played football together. And video games. And she told me that she was proud of me… that she loved me…”
What Steven knew of Rose came from stories and anecdotes, from picture albums and yellowed newspaper clippings, from the few videotapes she had left behind—from the one video she had explicitly recorded for Steven scarcely a month before she had delivered him.
It wasn’t a lot, but still, maybe it was just enough.
Because that sounded like Rose.
Her kindness.
Her warmth.
Her fun.
For she had loved, more than anything, to play.
“And then what happened?” She asked, her voice almost even.
“… I woke up.”
And Garnet watched, helpless, as a single tear wriggled itself loose from the corner of Steven’s eye, slipping gracelessly down his cheek and away.
He was silent after that.
She was almost positive, though, that he wasn’t asleep.
v.
“C’mon, Ste-man,” Amethyst wheedled, wafting the milkshake temptingly just below his nose. She’d walked nearly a block away from the hospital just to get the damn thing—a specialty of Stacey’s, the little retro milkshake bar on the corner of Pin Avenue and 32nd. The staff dressed up like they were from The Jetsons and everything. When Steven hadn’t been… when things hadn’t been so bad… they’d sometimes shlepped over there after his dialysis treatments to slam burgers and milkshakes as the jukebox played the Heaven Beetles’ greatest hits. One time, all five of them went together and sung shitty karaoke ’til Pearl was laughing so hard that strawberry milkshake shot out of her nose. “It’s got Reece’s Pieces in it—your faaaavorite…”
“I’m not thirsty, Amethyst,” he returned dully, turning his face away from her. “Sorry.”
His pale neck exposed to her in the gesture, Amethyst could now clearly see the livid bruises that crept vine-like out of the collar of his hospital gown, blooming blue and purple near the place where his central line was inserted just next to his collarbone.
If she could have, if it would have made sense, Amethyst would have crushed that stupid styrofoam cup between her fingers right then and there and enjoyed the feeling of milkshake pouring all over her shaking fingers.
She would have reveled in the destruction of the act.
The cathartic release.
Very probably, she would have begun to cry.
But Steven didn’t need that.
He didn’t need to see her lose her shit.
So, she only collapsed backwards on her feet and into the chair pulled up next to Steven’s bed. She was ginger, notably careful, as she placed the milkshake on the nearby tray, where it’d melt into itself between the hours and the blazing sun.
For the sun burned today, like golden fire, through the square window.
It scorched.
“You… you haven’t eaten in, like, days, my dude,” Amethyst stated plainly, as if he didn’t know that better than anyone else who cared to know. “Dr. M’s worried ‘bout you. If ya don’t get enough nutrients…”
But Steven cut across her bluntly then, still not looking at her. “… then they’ll have to put a feeding tube in me… I know. I heard Dr. Maheswaran and Pearl talking about it the other day.”
She supposed it should have surprised her that he already knew; maybe if she’d been Pearl, she would have jumped to try to sugarcoat the blow with something soft, something comforting, something consolatory.
But the truth of the matter was that there was nothing soft nor comforting nor consolatory about the ugly reality that reared its head above them, ten feet tall and ready to fucking strike.
He was fourteen, not ten.
He’d long stopped believing in magic.
“Doesn’t that scare you?” She asked him, frustration edging the rims of her scratchy voice, and she knew, even as she spoke, that she was being hella unfair. The poor kid couldn’t help the fact that he was puking his guts up left and right, but he was just laying there, lifeless, like he’d already accepted the inevitability of the stars that had spelled out his fate.
And it maddened Amethyst.
Sickened her.
She really want to pummel that goddamn milkshake cup into smithereens; she clenched her fists tightly on top of her knees to try and stop them from shaking.
She reminded herself—painfully—that it was only yesterday that happiness had been given to the kid before it was so brutally ripped away.
She told herself that even grown ass adults had trouble with that.
The volatility, the utter unpredictability of life.
“Of course it scares me, Amethyst,” Steven replied, his broken voice barely a whisper as he finally turned to look at her, his brown eyes drowning in the black bags which encased them. Grooved them. Hollowed them. “I don’t wanna have another surgery… but what do I… how can I do anything? I… I don’t know if I… I can’t stop this. I can’t.”
He seemed to struggle for the words, each one wrenched from him with a punishing drag of air.
And it struck Amethyst then and precisely there, with all the sharpness of a knife, that she took it for granted.
How easy it was for her to simply breathe.
“Catch your breath,” she implored him wildly, leaning forward in her chair. “Shh, shh, it’s okay, Steven.”
“B-but it’s not okay,” he insisted fiercely, sniffing. A single tear slanted out of the corners of one of his eyes and down the hollow of his face, slipping beneath the oxygenated cannulas, following the gentle curve of his beaten, world-weary face. “Don’t say that it’s okay. Please. I can’t take that anymore.”
“Okay, fine!” The awful words exploded out from her, tumbled and rushed and spilled from her mouth headlong on their hands and knees. Amethyst would say anything to make him calm down, and because she had no filter, because she’d never known how to mince the truth, she would mean every damn syllable. “Everything isn’t okay. Everything isn’t fine. Is that better? Are you happy now?”
But to her utter horror, to her staggering discontent, the answer was apparently—
“Yeah,” Steven sighed, closing his eyes in visible relief. “Yes.”
He laid there quietly for a handful of seconds to take in deep gulps of air.
It looked painful.
Excruciating.
“… I just wanna be on the same page,” he eventually finished, his voice a barely distinguishable mumble, distant and muffled.
Amethyst’s entire chest seized with fear unlike that she’d ever felt in a lifetime full of fear; it gripped her, and it wrestled with her.
Put its hands ‘round her throat and squeezed.
“And what page would that be, buddy?” She tried to keep her voice even anyway, though. Steven had yet to reopen his eyes. “Enlighten me.”
But there was no forthcoming reply.
His outburst had exhausted him, and sleep was merciless.
It stole him away.
vi.
They worked together in tentative silence, Greg and Pearl, taking damp washcloths and running them along the parts of Steven’s body that they could reach beneath all the medical apparatus: the column of his neck, his pale face, his arms, his leaden legs. He was too weak to take a shower in the bathroom attached to his hospital room, and they wouldn’t have been able to get a few of his lines wet anyway for the fear of clogging them up.
So a nurse provided them with a basin of soapy water, and they each picked up a rag, gliding the rough fabric as gently as possible across his skin as he laid beneath them like a doll, limp and lifeless.
Staring up at them from dark, button eyes.
Greg pulled his own cloth around Steven’s left ear, now rubbing the tip of it, now gently scraping behind, and tried not to think about how he’d done the very same when the kid was just a baby, so tiny in his arms, so helpless. He’d been afraid then, desperately so, to make just one wrong move. What if he accidentally hurt the little tyke? Rubbed his head a little too hard? Accidentally got soap in his eyes? What if he fucked up? (He was so good at fucking up.)
He’d miss Rose the most then, in those far too common moments, when he was at his lowest.
He’d miss the way she used to wrap her warm arms around his shoulders and show him, without so much as saying a word, what he looked like in her eyes.
Like he was someone worth loving in spite of everything.
In the face of it all.
Fourteen-years later, Steven was tiny beneath his arms.
Helpless.
And Greg missed Rose.
(He would always miss Rose.)
Pearl’s hands trembled as she gingerly lifted Steven’s left arm, weaving her cloth through the gaps between each of his fingers, swiping its breadth across his sweat-stickied palm. Greg followed his hooded gaze to where it settled somewhere on Pearl’s face, where there were faint circles cradling the spaces beneath her eyes, where there was a recent gauntness in the pointed architecture of her cheeks.
She must have noticed, too, because she blinked quickly, self-consciously, pausing her ministrations.
“Are you okay, Steven? I-I’m not hurting you, am I?”
Because that was the most important thing after all—neither of them wanted to hurt him anymore than he was already irrevocably damaged.
Couldn’t bear to even leave so much as a bruise.
“No,” came his simple reply.
It was the monosyllabism that was somehow the most dreadful above all.
Pearl also caught onto this, swiftly folding her slender fingers over Steven’s knuckles, her rag dangling like a white-sheeted ghost from her fingertips.
“Are you sure? You… you haven’t been yourself all day.”
He was silent at this, and Greg was pretty sure it was because the answer was obvious, painfully so.
(He hadn’t been himself in eight months now.)
The man swallowed thickly and turned away, dipping his rag in the basin on the nearby tray; the lukewarm water slushed around his wrists. He made a meal out of squeezing the cloth out, hoping that when he faced Steven and Pearl again, the moment would have passed, the unspoken things remaining unspoken.
But it was the very absence of a reply that seemed to gall Pearl, spiral her, and Greg could see, when he turned back to them, that she was utterly ruined.
She couldn’t hide it; it shone in the over-bright lights of her eyes.
“A-a kidney is bound to turn up,” she said, speaking in that rapid way she always did when she was upset (and trying not to let people see). “Dr. Maheswaran is looking for one even now, and… and… she thinks she might be able to secure a live donor kidney this time because, y-you know, the numbers and everything. Your numbers. Not that they’re abysmal. I mean, they’re bad, but—”
Greg tried to step in, tried to rescue her, before she got in too deep.
“I know it’s hard, Shtu-ball… but chin up,” he said gently as he maneuvered his washcloth beneath the kid’s neck. He skated around the bruises when he could. (There were so many new bruises, erupting like angry supernovas all across his tender skin.)
“Pearl’s right”—she shot him a grateful glance—“Dr. M’s not gonna give up, and neither are we.”
The silence stretched again.
It absolutely groaned.
And Steven finally moved his gaze away from Pearl and back to the bare ceiling.
Apparently, he’d been staring at the ceiling a lot today, divining something in it that no one else could see.
“Were you guys this scared… when Mom… when she was…”
But before he had ever gotten the words out, before he could finish another word let alone the whole sentence, Pearl abruptly extricated herself from Steven, gently setting his hand back on the bed, gently throwing her white cloth of a flag down.
“Excuse me,” she muttered feverishly. “I’ve got to… I can’t—restroom.”
But rather than flee into the door that led to the ensuite bathroom, she swung through the adjacent door, the one that led out into the hall, and Steven watched the place where her lithe form disappeared with cavernous eyes.
Sunken eyes.
Dull.
His mouth still partially open where he was still forming the words.
“I… I was so scared, buddy,” Greg said quietly, his throat constricting with all the surging memories. Her big, brown eyes. The tubes running through her skin. How he held her hand at the end, when Dr. Howard unplugged the machines, so she didn’t have to be alone.
Pearl, of course, held the other.
And there they were, the three of them.
And then, just the two of them.
Alone.
Steven’s eyes, so much like his mother’s own, turned to capture him now, penetrating his father somewhere deep in the muck and mire of his soul.
“… are you scared now?”
He choked back a sob.
“Yeah, buddy. I am.”
vii.
They sat together on Yellow’s hospital bed for a long time, not exactly talking, but communicating in other ways—in the brush of their nearly touching shoulders, in the painful glances they would occasionally shift each other from the corners of their eyes, in the way that Yellow’s pinky finger rested on top of Blue’s wrist where their hands were placed on top of the sheets in the microscopic space between them.
Now once more armored in a button-down shirt and a pair of slacks, Yellow Diamond almost looked herself—brilliant and impressive, striking to the last.
And then she would look to the side again, revealing the raw cuts now laced into her sculpted cheeks.
And Blue would fantasize about gently touching one, running her fingers across one of those tentatively scabbed lines, capturing the measure of her wife’s face, relearning it all over again.
But in the end, she didn’t dare.
Because for right now, this was simply enough.
To be sitting next to Yellow Diamond.
To simply be.
Together.
For once, not entirely alone, even though so many unvoiced things still remained.
Three words.
Mountains of griefs.
And something else now, too.
I don’t want to commit to claiming anything about these tests, Yellow had explained earlier, her usually gruff voice working itself into something gentle, a little more kind. Not until I know something for sure…
You don’t believe I can take it? Blue’s tone was as gentle as it was accusatory in that devastatingly contradictory way of hers.
Frankly, her wife returned quietly, no.
And somehow, it was the truthfulness in the other’s expression which made Blue stop short of pressing for more, for she could see, in the lines beneath Yellow Diamond’s golden eyes, just what these past four years had done to her.
You barely survived the last time. I barely survived watching you, Blue.
It was a miracle that they were even sitting here.
Barely touching, barely talking, but still… it was a start.
It was something simply to be breathing the same air.
Around three, Dr. Reed finally dropped by with Yellow’s discharge papers and another doctor whose name Blue didn’t quite catch; she was a tired-looking lady, though, with a fiercely drawn face. Salt-and-pepper hair. Hands shoved in the pockets of her lab coat. They asked if Yellow would come with them. It’d maybe take an hour or so.
The businesswoman made to get up, but Blue stopped her with a withered hand on her arm.
“Wait,” she murmured. “Your collar is crooked.”
She reached upwards to adjust the crumpled white band, straightening the crease between her delicate fingers.
And Yellow stared at her silently—with open tenderness and rawness and aching disbelief.
And when she swallowed, Blue could see every cord convulse in the smooth column of her throat.
“Would you wait for me, Blue?”
But she must have realized how vulnerable that sounded because she quickly tried to amend herself, always aware of her audience, that there were people watching. She stood up abruptly and a little awkwardly; it was clear that one of her legs was killing her.
“In the town car, I mean?”
“Yes,” Blue returned softly. “Of course.”
Yes.
A complicated expression quivered across Yellow Diamond’s plump lips then; it was hesitant and rich, stiff and almost unbearably visceral in its reluctant vulnerability.
It wasn’t necessarily a smile, but it was something.
It was a start.
viii.
Pearl would have done something, anything, to escape her own body, but it clung to her stubbornly as she half-ran through the hospital’s halls—down Truman Ward and down the glass-encased skywalk, down the elevator, down some forsaken hallway and then another, the turns she took arbitrary and varied.
Anywhere but Room 11037.
Horror clawed its way up her throat—shame and awfulness and terrible, maddening grief—until she could hardly breathe for its presence in her mouth. The nausea was overwhelming. The memories she usually kept carefully tucked away surged forth, frothing like foam on the waves that skimmed the shore near their home.
Just the mention of Rose.
That alone was enough to undo her on any regular day.
But context mattered, too.
Steven had brought up his mother so readily, as though they and their situations were one in the same.
Like they were both—
But she couldn’t complete the thought, even to herself, because fundamentally, Pearl couldn’t accept the inevitable—not when Rose Quartz had once taught her what it was to touch the stars.
Blindly, haphazardly, unintentionally, she found herself in one of the larger hallways in the hospital, and she immediately knew, from experience, that she had made her way down to the first floor. This particular corridor emptied out into the larger atrium and housed many of the administrative offices and various waiting rooms.
It was fairly empty. A few people in olive colored scrubs walked by and paid the woman no attention, her total disintegration invisible to them.
Unseen.
And somehow, the fact of this was soothing to Pearl.
Comforting.
So she swiped a delicate hand across her face and moved forward until a sight towards the end of the hall stopped her short, like a blow to the stomach without being half as neat—so uncomplicated and yet so devastatingly simple.
A silver-haired woman wearing a dark blue dress.
Hands poised on a metallic cane.
Staring inscrutably at a pair of nondescript double doors.
Her heavy braid fell thickly across her shoulder.
ix.
Blue Diamond had been on her way out to the car when she noticed a half-open door in a dyad of two on the first floor of the hospital. Golden light spilled from the room upon the bare, white tiles, submerging them in a brightness, a warmth.
The brass label on the adjacent wall gleamed at her invitingly.
The chapel.
Because naturally, hospitals possessed chapels—sanctified spaces where people could pray to their gods and hope they would intercede on the behalves of their loved ones. There was something psychologically comforting in the gesture, she supposed—to do something in a situation where it felt like nothing else could be done, to speak to the Divine and take comfort in the fact that they were not alone because the Divine was omnipresent, and the Divine was all-encompassing, and the Divine loved them powerfully.
She stood in front of those doors for what seemed like an eternity and remembered painfully when she had once loved God.
She’d grown up with a Rosary woven between her fingers, singing Alleluia every Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday at Mass until her daughter was murdered, and every theological comfort she had ever held dear scattered to the floor like beads.
She supposed it was only nostalgia then, which drove her to lightly press on that already half-opened door.
But as to what made her go in, the former headmistress could hardly articulate.
Her fingers wrapped themselves tightly around the head of her cane.
Clank, she proceeded forward.
Clank.
Clank.
Clank.
x.
Above all, Pearl didn’t know what made her do it—it was almost as though a sense of daring reckless gripped her and propelled her forward, step over unthinking step. She approached the spot where Blue Diamond had only recently disappeared, her pale eyes flicking upwards to the label which named the room for what it was, and then back to the double doors again, which hadn’t been completely shuttered to a close since the entrance of its last visitor.
It was a small chapel from what Pearl could tell at a cursory glance, only offering the essential trifecta of artifacts—a couple of pews, a tiny altar, and what appeared to be the portrait of a dove, spreading its elegant wings across the back wall.
And there, sitting in the middle of the front row, was Blue Diamond, her head defiantly lifted.
As though determinedly not in prayer.
Her concentrated gaze seemed to be trained upwards, directed at the beautifully painted mural, upon which the gentle lighting threw its warm, amber glow, casting the bird in molten gold.
That same feeling of daring propitiated her again, and it was with her arms tucked neatly over her chest that Pearl impulsively drew closer, stepping across the boundary of the threshold with tender steps, ballerina movements. Her footfalls were light by nature, and in the thin carpet, they were hushed to the point that the older woman didn’t seem to be aware that she had company at all.
Her cane stood, temporarily abandoned, on the side of the row.
Though her head was high, her shoulders were hunched in on themselves.
Caved.
When Pearl reached the pew directly behind her, she skimmed her knuckles against the grains of the wooden armrest, producing a low, plaintive note as a means of attracting her attention without entirely startling her.
And it was with painful slowness, a certain gracefulness, too, that Blue Diamond finally turned her head to look Pearl’s way, her shadowed eyes wide with surprise and melancholy, with curiosity and well-practiced temperance.
Pearl’s thin brow furrowed.
She bit her lower lip.
xi.
“May I sit?” The Crystal Gem asked, and there was a brusqueness in her otherwise smooth voice that reminded Blue Diamond of yet another encounter with one of Steven’s motley guardians—the one who had stood in front of the door, the muscled woman with bicolored eyes.
She had warned her against hurting Steven.
She, too, had looked at Blue with quiet disdain.
Perhaps loathing was the more fitting word.
“Be my guest…?” Blue returned, allowing a pause by which the woman could introduce herself.
“Pearl,” she curtly supplied as she lowered herself to the end of the pew and sat rather primly, with one ankle crossed daintily over the other.
“Pearl,” Blue echoed gently, trying the name on her tongue. It was a lyrical number, assonant and delicate, much like the person to which it belonged.
For she was slight—as willowy as the other Crystal Gem had been powerfully built. Simply put, she looked as though one puff of wind would blow her over, bending her back like the breeze did stalks of long reeds, rending her, bifurcating her, snapping her in two. And just as Yellow and Blue’s physiognomies told the stories of their griefs, so, too, did the lines beneath Pearl’s eyes announce her own.
There was a boy in the hospital bed.
There was a wasting disease.
“May I assume,” she continued tentatively, “by the expression in your face, that you already know who I am?”
“Yes,” Pearl replied certainly, but then just as immediately said, “No. I don’t know.”
She closed her pale eyes against some inner turmoil as the ambient lighting gently kissed her beaten face, caressing her cheeks in honeyed gold.
“I know your name, and I know what your family’s company has done,” she continued, “but I suppose that isn’t the same thing as knowing you, is it? Understanding why my… why he… why Steven loves you.”
There was it again—that same oblique indictment that the other Crystal Gem had leveled at Diamond Electric, silently condemning her for all sorts of untold flaws, and Blue Diamond frowned, sucking a little on her lip as the charge did what it was intended to do—level a finger directly at her chest, pressing neatly upon her sternum.
Perhaps these activists were not as inconsequential as she had wanted them to be after all.
Perhaps they had something important to say.
Perhaps here was yet another instant in which Blue had looked away, painstakingly ignoring all of the uncouth things in order to more capably realize the vision of her perfect, invulnerable, tableau of an ugly, imperfect, sheltered life.
She accused Yellow of shoving Pink Diamond in a drawer, but perhaps Blue had always made sure to be in another room when all the shoving was being done.
“Because he loves you,” Pearl finished quietly, “and I’m trying to… I can’t quite figure it out.”
She turned to Blue directly then, appealing to her simply with her over-bright eyes and her slightly parted mouth, with the shadows all over her face.
So many premature lines.
And Blue Diamond returned the gaze as steadily as she could.
Perhaps she even mirrored it.
Lines and shadows and lines.
xii.
“I don’t think… I don’t imagine that I’ve been good at love in a very long time,” Blue began, each word slow and precise, maneuvered carefully on her lilting tongue like a hand-rolled cigarette wheeled between expert fingertips. “Giving, receiving it… showing it… even with my daughter… even before she—”
But the woman could not complete the sentence.
And Pearl found that she didn’t want her to.
The unspoken conclusion sat in the space between them—a little girl Pearl imagined her to be, arranged in a pretty pink dress, dangling her Mary-Jane enclosed feet from the crimson pew.
“But Steven Universe,” she continued, and even at his very name, the mere mention of him, the older woman’s expression seemed to subtly transform, the heaviness in it unfurling.
Incrementally lightening.
Surely.
“He extended a flower and smile to me that day in the cemetery. He noticed that I was sad. And that taught me a lesson I had never thought to learn in all of these many staggering years…”
Pearl couldn’t help herself then; a breathless question fell impatiently from her lips.
“And what would that be?”
Blue Diamond arched a dark brow at her that would have been haughty were it not for the tears glistening in her eyes, threatening to exceed their sunken edges.
“That there is such kindness, such… such love, in your troubles being seen, identified, and acted upon. He saw my sadness, and he named it. He gave me that tiny hibiscus and showed me, wordlessly, that I was not alone.”
She glided a skeletal hand across the side of her face, her palm capturing the beginnings of those now falling tears.
“I was being seen, Pearl, for the first time in I cannot tell you when… and it made me realize that this is what I wanted most of all, that perhaps, this is what all humans really want in the end.”
“To be seen,” Pearl repeated, her voice constricted, so many emotions thick.
“Yes,” Blue Diamond whispered with a gracious nod of her head, disturbing the heaviness of her silvery braid, “and to be loved by another.”
“Is that what he wants?” She pressed insistently, but deep down, the answer was already known to her, spelled out to her in the rush of so many memories. How many times alone in the past couple of days had he told them as much, both with words and without them? How many times had he asked them all not to look away? Amethyst opened a window for him so he could hear the words they’d all been too cowardly to utter in his presence. In a hospital room, in the dead of night, he told her to rip the bandaid off, to confirm that which everyone already knew and tiptoed around instead of saying.
You’re very sick, sweetheart.
I know.
And even still, even after all these horrible and unsubtle signs, she’d already done the damn thing and run away from him again anyway.
He asked if she’d been scared when Rose had been in the same place, laying in a hospital bed.
Sick.
Dying.
And yes, the answer so clearly, so blatantly was.
“Yes,” Blue Diamond murmured, her quiet voice tender.
And almost, if not entirely, kind.
“I think that is what he has desired all along.”
Pearl had no other recourse then, no semblance of a facade left by which to cling to, to desperately hold onto in a chapel where two entirely different women sat side by side, utterly undone by the same boy.
She brought both of her hands up to her mouth then and began to weep.
xiii.
Blue allowed the woman her moment of private grief, turning her head away from the sight, even though the sounds weren’t as easily escapable.
The sobs.
The keening.
The primality of it all.
Tears gathered in her own eyes, but she refused to let them fall, she swept them all away—because she understood intimately, viscerally, somehow without really knowing it—that this wasn’t her moment, her child, her bone deep, unbearable, unlivable grief.
Though it had once had been.
And it still was.
But not for this child.
Not for Steven Universe.
She’d lost a child; she wasn’t currently losing one.
And there was a fundamental difference in the fact.
There was primacy.
Five minutes passed, maybe ten, and Pearl gathered herself, collected all her tiny, fragmented pieces into a frame that wasn’t entirely shaking with its own reckoning anymore. And Blue finally looked over to see that the woman was leaned forward on the edge of her pew, the heels of her hands pressed against her eyes.
“He’s not doing well,” she said faintly.
If Blue hadn’t been staring at the movement of her thin mouth, she wouldn’t have known where the words had come from.
Perhaps she wouldn’t have even believed them.
They struck cleanly, like a slap to the face.
“Yesterday’s… disappointment”—disappointment was not the correct word—“hurt him badly, and he’s shutting down. Closing off.”
Each word was painful, razor sharp in clarity, dragged from Pearl’s teeth against her will. She dragged her fingers in lines down her wet face, now reaching the point of her chin, now cupping them into fists on either side of her jaw.
“We can’t get through to him,” she finished quietly. “We’ve all tried.”
And tried and tried and tried—Blue could see every failed attempt scrawled in the lines all over the woman’s tired face. The devastation bruised her black and blue.
“I’m sorry,” she offered simply. “I’m so… sorry.”
But Pearl, with all suddenness, with an aspect of barely repressible contempt, leveled her an incredulous look as though to say, What good will sorry do?
She had an excellent point.
“You should talk to him sometime,” she went on to say, turning away from Blue now. A series of conflicted emotions seemed to be playing out in real time across her pale, sky-colored eyes—disdain warring with grief warring with loathing warring with grudging respect.
It wasn’t quite endearment, though.
And Blue Diamond had a sneaking suspicion that it never would be.
“Maybe not today… he’s tired… hurt… but some day… you should visit him. He would like that.”
It was Blue’s turn to stare at the other woman incredulously now, her mouth slightly open as she awaited a punchline that never quite came. Pearl obstinately refused to meet her gaze, fingertips templed just next to her trembling lips.
“I… I have nothing to offer him,” she whispered, a trembling note in her voice as she tried to convey exactly just how serious she was being. “I’m hardly… I mean, he was the one who saved me. I don’t know what I could ever give him in equal return.”
But somehow, without really knowing why, how, or all the sundry explanatory variables in-between, she knew that this was perfectly untrue.
And Pearl seemed to know it, too, for the corner of her lip slightly lifted in the sliver of a sardonic smile.
“Start with a flower and a smile, perhaps.”
#bellow diamond#blue diamond#yellow diamond#steven universe#pearl#garnet#amethyst#priyanka maheswaran#greg universe#connie maheswaran#rose quartz#pink diamond#flower child#mimiku#oh my god#this chapter is a monster
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Rebecca Rittenhouse In New York City - May 16, 2019
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— POPPY REED FASHION
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