LOSS
by PYRINSOMNIAC
RATED FRT |
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One Shot- John's POV on the
effect a brother's death has on the family.
Author's Notes: I wrote this a while back when I
first dove into 'Thunderbirds' fanfiction. It's mostly
movieverse, as I've never seen the TV series, but I took
elements I liked from both of them to create a sort of tweaked
AU. Characterizations are based entirely on fanfiction, so
forgive me if they're off.
We'd
always said that wild love of speed he had would be the death
of him, but none of us ever really believed it.
How could
we? Dad and Scott were both the same way, and all of us are
adrenaline junkies to some degree, but Alan... Alan was
something else. Wild and impulsive and charming and so very,
very vibrantly alive. Alan made colors seem brighter and
laughter sweeter; he reallylived. And that made it okay
that he was kinda immature and self- absorbed, because hey, he
was a teenager still and he was the youngest and there was all
the time in the world for him to grow out of it.
And... and
buried deep was the baseless assumption that because our
mother died giving him life that we'd sacrificed our quota,
that it somehow gave him some measure of protection, that he
could afford to be reckless. We weren't going through that
again.
We
couldn't take it again.
I suppose
it's an irony too giant for me to appreciate that that was the
only thing we were right about.
Dad...
Dad's completely withdrawn. Grandma makes sure he gets fed,
but it's wearing on her too. Scott tries to help her, but the
three of them were all his parents. After Mom died Dad hid
himself away. He didn't have much to do with the baby; he'd
bury himself in work and every now and again, when he couldn't
bear Mom's complete absence, he'd find Alan and play with him
or, at night, run his hand over his hair and kiss his forehead
and just watch him sleep. The only time he comes out of his
office is when there's a rescue. He leaves Brains to run
things; he can't face Alan's portrait.
I'm
worried about Grandma. It's aged her; she's exhausted all the
time, she's gotten careless with things she never would have
before. Cooking has become a chore; she actually lets Kyrano
do the dishes, and she hasn't done any cleaning since
Alan's... accident. She stoops and shuffles and I've seen her
cry at least three times.
I'd never
seen Grandma cry before. Not even when Mom died.
Scott's
not much better. He's trying to hold both the family- what's
left of our family- and International Rescue together, but
it's too much for one man. He's going to wind up collapsing
soon.
When Scott
falls, so too will Virgil. Virgil's always been Scott's
wingman, but he's what has made it possible for us to limp
along this long.
Virgil
eats, and makes sure everyone else does. Virgil follows
Scott's orders to the letter on a rescue without taking issue
at Scott's abrasive manner and somehow manages to coax
everyone else into doing it, too. Virgil went with Scott to
identify the body, and when Scott came out of the room
(because he wouldn't let anybody else, not even Virgil, go in
there with him,) it was Virgil that caught him as he stumbled
out the door, Virgil who found Scott and held him as he cried
later that night and threw away the whiskey bottle, who
bundled Scott off to bed.
It was
Virgil who had the strength to wait until then to walk out to
the beach and scream into the endless noise of the surf.
Gordon
is... lost. Now he's the youngest, now there's no Terrible
Twosome and no pranks, no laughter, maybe no laughter ever
again. He walks around with no purpose, only this look
in his eyes, and he's admitted to me that he feels like he's
been hollowed out. Like a Jack o' lantern.
And I... I
flaked out. I spent about a week planetside before suggesting
that I return to Five, where I can pretend that he'll be there
when I get back and I didn't bury my baby brother. Where all I
have to do is listen, because there's nothing I can do.
Nothing to be done.
And that's
the hardest part, not doing anything but living. |