Sam Flynn (
improvises) wrote2016-09-21 01:38 pm
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the farther you run, the more you'll feel undefined
Sam is fairly certain that he's a terrible father.
A good one would be home with his daughter right now, trying to talk her through what's happened, keeping her close. He definitely wouldn't have called for a babysitter and left the apartment as soon as he possibly could, pretending for the moment like there wasn't anything wrong. Sam hadn't known what else to do, though, only that he'd needed fresh air and a chance to clear his head, to stop feeling like the walls were closing in on him.
The road gives him that, the same way it used to when he was younger, before he had a kid to look after and stopped engaging in as much risky behavior as he possibly could. It's the only place he can think to be, too, on the back of his dad's Ducati, riding as fast as the old bike will possibly take him. There isn't even anywhere he's going, not really, not at first, just weaving down side streets and past cars actually obeying the speed limit, anything to keep moving and not have to stop and let the weight of what's happened settle on him, inevitable as that might be.
He wonders if this is how his dad felt after the accident. Sam doesn't remember much of that now, not the details, only that it happened, and while this isn't exactly the same — it isn't like he and Andrea were married, after all; they hadn't been together in two and a half years — it's close enough. He was all of two years old when his dad had to tell him that his mom wasn't ever coming home. Now he has to do the same with his own two-year-old child.
It's the last fucking thing he ever wanted, for her life to wind up like his. That is, perhaps, the only thing that hurts more than the fact that he's now lost not just someone else, but Andrea for a second time.
By the time he pulls to a stop, parking his motorcycle alongside a curb, he isn't sure how long he's been on the road or what time it is, nor does he care. It can't be all that late, or Jordan's babysitter would have been calling him by now. He's also, for that matter, not entirely sure how he got here, but it's the only place it makes sense for him to be. Where he should be is at home, but he just doesn't have it in him to go back there yet and deal with this head-on. With that being the case, there's really only person he could go to with this. There aren't many he has left as it is.
Inside, he takes the stairs up to the second floor of High Gate Terrace, knocking on the door of Eden's apartment. He should have called first, he realizes, but it isn't exactly like he'd been thinking ahead about any of this. "Hey, are you in?" he calls. "It's Sam."
A good one would be home with his daughter right now, trying to talk her through what's happened, keeping her close. He definitely wouldn't have called for a babysitter and left the apartment as soon as he possibly could, pretending for the moment like there wasn't anything wrong. Sam hadn't known what else to do, though, only that he'd needed fresh air and a chance to clear his head, to stop feeling like the walls were closing in on him.
The road gives him that, the same way it used to when he was younger, before he had a kid to look after and stopped engaging in as much risky behavior as he possibly could. It's the only place he can think to be, too, on the back of his dad's Ducati, riding as fast as the old bike will possibly take him. There isn't even anywhere he's going, not really, not at first, just weaving down side streets and past cars actually obeying the speed limit, anything to keep moving and not have to stop and let the weight of what's happened settle on him, inevitable as that might be.
He wonders if this is how his dad felt after the accident. Sam doesn't remember much of that now, not the details, only that it happened, and while this isn't exactly the same — it isn't like he and Andrea were married, after all; they hadn't been together in two and a half years — it's close enough. He was all of two years old when his dad had to tell him that his mom wasn't ever coming home. Now he has to do the same with his own two-year-old child.
It's the last fucking thing he ever wanted, for her life to wind up like his. That is, perhaps, the only thing that hurts more than the fact that he's now lost not just someone else, but Andrea for a second time.
By the time he pulls to a stop, parking his motorcycle alongside a curb, he isn't sure how long he's been on the road or what time it is, nor does he care. It can't be all that late, or Jordan's babysitter would have been calling him by now. He's also, for that matter, not entirely sure how he got here, but it's the only place it makes sense for him to be. Where he should be is at home, but he just doesn't have it in him to go back there yet and deal with this head-on. With that being the case, there's really only person he could go to with this. There aren't many he has left as it is.
Inside, he takes the stairs up to the second floor of High Gate Terrace, knocking on the door of Eden's apartment. He should have called first, he realizes, but it isn't exactly like he'd been thinking ahead about any of this. "Hey, are you in?" he calls. "It's Sam."
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He barely remembers his own mother, most of what he knows based on what other people told him, and while maybe that's not ideal, he knows she's right. It's better than nothing. "I've told her a little about the island already. When she was born, when Andrea and I were together, when my dad was around. I guess it'll be more of the same. God, I don't know what pictures I might have."
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"Still, she'll be glad you have any. Keep telling her the stories. Little things. Anything."
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He should have. He's lost his father three times over now, and he knows better than to think he'll ever see the old man again. That's far more chances than he should have gotten. At least Jordan was young enough when they showed up here from the island that she won't remember him. She doesn't need to have one more person to miss.
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"Yeah, well, someone tell that to who or whatever makes people disappear all the damn time," he says wryly, about as close as he can get to a joke under the current circumstances. The truth of the matter is, he doubts it really makes all that much difference. Everyone left him even before that was the case.
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Sighing, she reaches over to squeeze his hand. "I'm sorry."
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