Neil Perry (
shadows_have_offended) wrote2018-01-22 08:31 pm
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Classes were back in session, and Neil is pretty sure he's about to go insane. The classes aren't hard, and he's doing well, but everything has just been the tiniest things, one after the other, and he's not entirely sure how to deal with any of it. So he just tries to keep everything quiet and still in his chest. For the most part it works. For the most part it's actually pretty easy.
And then he gets a paper back in a class. One of those reflective things, tell us what you did over vacation, for English, and it's all marked to hell. Inappropriate features prominently on the second page, over and over again. Neil doesn't really understand. He wrote about going to Mass on Christmas with Gabriel, and about the morning after. There was nothing inappropriate about it. Except that it's queer.
It flames in his chest. Something related to his father telling him to quit the play. Something related, even, to Keating telling him he wasn't trapped. Darrow has been so good. Now it's just the same as everything else, and it hurts.
Inappropriate.
He winds up in front of Goodnight's door because something draws him there. He knows what draws him there. It takes him a minute to knock on the door, still clutching that damn essay in his other first, feeling stupid and hurt about it. But it's better than hiding in his apartment, or the end of the dock, or somewhere worse. He knocks again, heart in his throat.
And then he gets a paper back in a class. One of those reflective things, tell us what you did over vacation, for English, and it's all marked to hell. Inappropriate features prominently on the second page, over and over again. Neil doesn't really understand. He wrote about going to Mass on Christmas with Gabriel, and about the morning after. There was nothing inappropriate about it. Except that it's queer.
It flames in his chest. Something related to his father telling him to quit the play. Something related, even, to Keating telling him he wasn't trapped. Darrow has been so good. Now it's just the same as everything else, and it hurts.
Inappropriate.
He winds up in front of Goodnight's door because something draws him there. He knows what draws him there. It takes him a minute to knock on the door, still clutching that damn essay in his other first, feeling stupid and hurt about it. But it's better than hiding in his apartment, or the end of the dock, or somewhere worse. He knocks again, heart in his throat.
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"Here, let me take a look."
Neil was a terribly articulate young man, coming from a private education. Goodnight knew he was likely a decent writer, and he was probably a rather creative one, once he had the leeway.
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"I'm such an idiot," he mutters. "I should have just written about...the snow storm or something. That was before school started."
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"Might not have been able to be so open when I came from, but I don't see any reason for this to have been marked as inappropriate in a place like Darrow," he huffed, rather offended when he realized the teacher must have taken issue with Neil talking about his boyfriend. It was either that, or the blatant mention of religion, but Goodnight didn't see how that could be inappropriate in a personal essay.
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His fingers slid up and into his hair and he tugs for a moment.
"Stupid." His voice trembles a little bit. "I should have just written about the snow storm or something. Nothing wrong with writing about a snow storm."
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Goodnight was-- well, he felt rather outraged, actually. Neil was a good student, and he was a good writer - there was no reason for his essay to have been marked so poorly other than simple bigotry.
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He looks up, eyes wide and shocked and frankly terrified for a moment. He wants to snatch the paper back from him, but that seems more telling than anything else. And what on Earth does that accomplish.
He stares at Goodnight, at those soulful blue eyes that always, terribly, hurt Neil's chest to look at too long. "No, I don't need you to talk to anybody, I just--. It's fine."
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"This is the kind of nonsense that small people do to crush others and there's no place for it in a school."
He supposed it would help no one to lose his temper, so he took a breath and tried to ease back down. He looked at Neil, who seemed hurt and scared, and he ached all the more.
"I'm sorry, son. I just hope you understand, you are not the one in the wrong here."
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It will have to fit for now.
"I'll be alright. Just...frustrated. It's the first I've had something this rough since I've been here. But I--it's hardly the worst."
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He knew that look: the look of pushing something so far down that one hoped it would just stop existing. He also knew that was a quick way to an ulcer, or to a dozen other unpleasant things. Like holding a gun and realizing it had an empty chamber.
"Bein' frustrated, even bein' hurt, is fine. Maybe you can't even do anything about it - maybe fighting him on it won't fix anything. But forgetting it isn't going to do you any favors either."
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"No, I'm not--it's just not going to do anything to be all fussed up about it, I guess. You know?" He leaned back on the sofa, like he might disappear into the cushions. "Being angry doesn't do anything. So I'm better off just...trying to move on. And not mentioning my boyfriend around that teacher ever again."
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He'd seen enough of that, done enough of it, that he didn't want to see someone as young as Neil fall down that same road.
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He made a quiet noise when he suddenly had Mercy Beau's wet nose pressed up against his palm. He hadn't heard him move over from his little bed. But there was the dog, big square head pressed in close like this was exactly what he needed right now. Neil supposed it wasn't bad to have.
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"Here, stay a while. You want some tea or coffee?" He wanted to take care of Neil for a bit, if the boy would let him.
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"Coffee," he says. Then, a bit sheepishly, "With some scotch in it, if you won't give me a lecture about that. I'm old enough to have it."
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When the coffee was ready, he poured a mug for each of them, spiked both, and brought the mugs over on a tray with the cream and sugar.
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"We didn't even do anything," Neil says, after a long, protracted silence. It's sullen and bitter to say. "I didn't even have to cut anything I wouldn't want to talk to with a teacher out, because we didn't do anything that night, after church. We just went back to mine, and in the morning I tried to make breakfast like my mom always did, because I thought that'd be nice, because he took me to church."