heart [ skipped ] a beat. kyrite.
Feb 18, 2021 1:41:24 GMT -5
Post by ✨ zozo. on Feb 18, 2021 1:41:24 GMT -5
The doctor looks her dead in the eyes and tells her "You need to stop drinking. Immediately."
She starts laughing at that. Sitting on a clinic bed with a drip in her arm, she'd stopped vomiting for the first time in three days no more than an hour ago. It's fucking hilarious that this doctor is the first person that has sat her down and looked right at her and told her to do what everyone else has said in so many other words.
Not her mother, not her father, not her sister or her husband or even her best friend. Nobody has ever looked at her and said stop drinking.
Not even her own reflection.
"Yeah, okay. I need a cup of coffee," Pyrite replies once the laughter fades to a twitching smile. "Fetch me one?"
"You need to stop drinking caffeine too."
Her joy vanishes, replaced with a scowl. It's a strange comfort, locking her jaw and tightening her muscles, sizing up an opponent like she's the most lethal thing in all of District One - even though she's sitting in a bed wearing paper-thin pyjamas and she hasn't eaten solid food in days.
"Or what? You'll arrest me? It's not a crime to want a cup of joe, Doc."
"Well, actually Mrs. Fray-"
She stops him right there, a swish of her hand. "Mrs. Fray is my mother-in-law, I'd rather like to not be reminded of her at..." a glance at the clock on the wall, "six in the morning?"
There's an awkward shuffle of papers, a hesitation - a hint of a chuckle. This is one of those doctors that thinks he knows more about you than you do, Pyrite can smell them from a mile away. The same ones that tell her she needs rehab. That tell her she's damaged goods. That tell her her marriage will fall apart, that she and Kellan are too destructive on their own, let alone together. The ones she buried with all of their bullshit.
Fight or flight, she's too tired to fight. Her body simply won't allow it.
"I'm leaving."
It's a defense mechanism. For all the fight Pyrite Shore had in her, she was equally as good at running from her problems until they slapped her in the face. She stands up, too quickly, stars and black holes in her vision and before she knows it the doctor is gently guiding her back down to her pillows and blankets.
"I said I'm-"
"Ms. Shore-"
"Where are my jeans?"
"Ms. Shore I'm trying to tell you something-"
"And where's my fucking coffee?"
Spiteful, her head cranes around the room as her vision adjusts - she'd forgotten, in her panic, that she hasn't stood up for three days.
"Like I said," the doctor sighs, scratching his head with the back of a pen, "I can't legally give you coffee."
"Oh, did the High Council pass a new law in the last 48 hours outlawing coffee?" Pyrite scoffs, spying her jeans and shirt folded up neatly on the end of her bed. She leans forward without thought, a hand outstretched to grab at the fabrics, a second later she feels bile in the back of her throat and she retracts her hand back to clamp over her mouth, drowning out a fear-filled gasp.
Drilled into her at birth, never show weakness.
Doesn't stop her from hurling up the bare contents of her stomach anyway. Watery liquid hits the bottom of the bucket by her side and she can hear her mother's disappointed tutt ringing in her ears.
"Call my husband," Pyrite croaks after a while, keeping her face buried in the lid of the bucket. Her shame sounds just as worse in the echo.
"He's already here."
Panic, relief, she is tossed and turned between the two. Pyrite raises her head, runs her tongue across the back of her teeth, breaths rapid and rising in her chest - adrenaline kicking into gear when exhaustion threatens to send her unconscious.
"Wh...?" Who, why, when, where, so many words and yet she can't wrap her head around any of them. Hangover, she thinks, the terrible kind. The ones that come after the worst of her storms. The ones that send her to clinics like this.
The doctor sighs, choosing his words carefully. "I'll let him tell you the... good news."
The sickest of doctors, Pyrite scowls as he leaves the room, would think their inevitable divorce good news. That, and perhaps her father-in-law.
When Kellan walks into the room she refuses to look at him.
"Just say it," voice breaking as she stares out of the window to watch the sun rise. She'd done it now, told too many lies, drunk herself stupid one too many times. Kellan had broken near all bones in the District but he'd never laid a hand on her that wasn't tender, wasn't gentle, wasn't there to heal instead of hurt.
But every time she ended up here, she saw it hurt him over and over and over again.
If this didn't kill her, the look in his eyes certainly would. Nothing to lose, she swallows her pride, braces for impact, and looks the love of her life in the eyes for what she's certain is her one, last, final time.
"Say it, Kel."
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