Most call me Gold. (
amicustenebris) wrote2023-05-17 09:49 pm
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Entry tags:
PSL - For Archie, Set After 4a
With a kind of numbness that he hadn't felt since he cast Belle out of his castle and destroyed half his collection, Rumpelstiltskin made his way to civilization the very same night he was sent away. Once he hit the interstate it was not long before someone pulled over to offer help to the hobbling man, who looked like he'd wandered from a wreck. The stranger said they'd seen an abandoned car down the way a bit and offered to get him into town to call a tow truck.
He took advantage of his good fortune and was quickly able to access food, an ATM, a cane, and finally a place to collapse and eventually rent a car the following morning. He had thoughts of what he would have to do to figure out a way back over the town line. He understood the magic at work there, knew he could only go back in if summoned back in. But already the scheming began. Belle didn't understand his motivations, and he'd been incapable of correctly explaining. That was all there was to it. Part of him believed if he could say it right, if he could make sense of it all himself -- if he could just convince her that all she'd seen never meant he didn't love her? Then he could fix everything. Then he could be home with his wife, able to visit his son, able to walk and use magic.
He tried to call her from the phone in the motel. No answer. He tried a few times. There was an answer once. He couldn't speak.
Gold haunted that little hamlet outside of Ogunquit for a few days, with limited access to the internet or contact, just hoping he'd find some loophole that'd let him back in, afraid to wander out too far lest he lose his chance.
As far as he knew, Belle never caught on that he was calling. If she did, then she was patient. She stayed on the line longer than she needed. Spoke, and waited. Spoke. Then said goodbye. He couldn't work out why he could never say anything back, or even beg forgiveness. He kept doing it, knowing he couldn't stop himself crying afterward, knowing it was going to hurt every time, because he'd gotten so used to hearing her in the morning when she woke. And now when he called just to hear her it came with apprehension, certainty he'd hear that litany of accusations all over again, but he needed to. Maybe if he did speak, if he did let her know it was him, and he allowed it to happen, she might see he was sincere. She would forgive him. Remember she loved him. He would hand her the dagger and be her slave, be everything Zelena wanted him to be for her if that was what it took.
But he couldn't even bring himself to do that. It took him days to figure out why. That was when he headed south.
His rental car died just inside of Vermont. There were questions about his license. He switched to travel by bus from there -- crowded (good that he was traveling light), slow as sin -- he saw far more of the state than he really ever cared to. It felt ridiculously long for where he was headed, given how short a trip it had been by plane, but he didn't know if he could handle flying again. Not alone.
In Manhattan, the first place that he tried was Neal's old apartment, of course, and he did not expect to find it occupied -- by the Queen's married beau and his family, no less. They offered to leave it to him, which he declined. After a cursory search of the place, he found one or two familiar baubles, things his son held onto from his childhood all these years, somehow, things from their world, and he pocketed those, feeling an uncomfortable tightness that told him to get away, and he left as quickly as his legs could carry him.
Marion seemed especially keen to convince him to stay, at least until he found better accommodations.
He didn't trust it. He got away.
Crossing out into the evening air, he felt a rush of pent emotion and memory. Unkind words said in this very place. Hook's attack and his near death.
Then his actual death.
Then Neal's.
He went numb.
He took advantage of his good fortune and was quickly able to access food, an ATM, a cane, and finally a place to collapse and eventually rent a car the following morning. He had thoughts of what he would have to do to figure out a way back over the town line. He understood the magic at work there, knew he could only go back in if summoned back in. But already the scheming began. Belle didn't understand his motivations, and he'd been incapable of correctly explaining. That was all there was to it. Part of him believed if he could say it right, if he could make sense of it all himself -- if he could just convince her that all she'd seen never meant he didn't love her? Then he could fix everything. Then he could be home with his wife, able to visit his son, able to walk and use magic.
He tried to call her from the phone in the motel. No answer. He tried a few times. There was an answer once. He couldn't speak.
Gold haunted that little hamlet outside of Ogunquit for a few days, with limited access to the internet or contact, just hoping he'd find some loophole that'd let him back in, afraid to wander out too far lest he lose his chance.
As far as he knew, Belle never caught on that he was calling. If she did, then she was patient. She stayed on the line longer than she needed. Spoke, and waited. Spoke. Then said goodbye. He couldn't work out why he could never say anything back, or even beg forgiveness. He kept doing it, knowing he couldn't stop himself crying afterward, knowing it was going to hurt every time, because he'd gotten so used to hearing her in the morning when she woke. And now when he called just to hear her it came with apprehension, certainty he'd hear that litany of accusations all over again, but he needed to. Maybe if he did speak, if he did let her know it was him, and he allowed it to happen, she might see he was sincere. She would forgive him. Remember she loved him. He would hand her the dagger and be her slave, be everything Zelena wanted him to be for her if that was what it took.
But he couldn't even bring himself to do that. It took him days to figure out why. That was when he headed south.
His rental car died just inside of Vermont. There were questions about his license. He switched to travel by bus from there -- crowded (good that he was traveling light), slow as sin -- he saw far more of the state than he really ever cared to. It felt ridiculously long for where he was headed, given how short a trip it had been by plane, but he didn't know if he could handle flying again. Not alone.
In Manhattan, the first place that he tried was Neal's old apartment, of course, and he did not expect to find it occupied -- by the Queen's married beau and his family, no less. They offered to leave it to him, which he declined. After a cursory search of the place, he found one or two familiar baubles, things his son held onto from his childhood all these years, somehow, things from their world, and he pocketed those, feeling an uncomfortable tightness that told him to get away, and he left as quickly as his legs could carry him.
Marion seemed especially keen to convince him to stay, at least until he found better accommodations.
He didn't trust it. He got away.
Crossing out into the evening air, he felt a rush of pent emotion and memory. Unkind words said in this very place. Hook's attack and his near death.
Then his actual death.
Then Neal's.
He went numb.
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He wasn't sure why Gold's meditation method wouldn't work anymore, but now wasn't the time to push. He'd done enough.
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"...Thank you again. For the food. If you haven't eaten today, you should."
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He resumed eating. It still didn't taste too good. Either the food was bad or just the emotional rollercoaster had killed any real appreciation for it. A good night's sleep should (hopefully) fix that right up.
The Next Morning
Perhaps it was a peace offering of sorts, or some ancient instinct he would never shake even as the dark one, Gold remembered that the doctor had been as reluctant to eat as he had been, if not moreso. His first instinct was to make something proper by hand.
In the end it felt relaxing and centering, and what came of the small bag of groceries he asked for was just as much what he felt like eating as what he thought might be edible to someone else.
So when the Doctor emerged into the living area of the suite he might be greeted with the smell of butter and eggs and other breakfast smells. Savory french style toast using sliced challah, simple cheese, sausage, some sauteed mushrooms and cherry tomatoes.
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He was as intelligent as a human but still a dog. Sue him.
It'd taken a while for Archie to fall asleep the night before, reading on the Kindle until no amount of bumping up the font size could make the words legible. At least when he'd finally dropped off, his demons had decided to give him the night off.
The smell of food had gotten his stomach rumbling, forcing him back to wakefulness. He could really use some coffee right about now, but he'd settle for knowing what that smell was. (The hotel's breakfast was pretty decent but didn't smell this good.)
Gold wasn't in his bed which meant he'd beaten Archie awake. The former cricket put on his glasses and headed into the main living area. "Good morning."
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Coffee had been less of a thing in the Enchanted Forest, of course. And he still quite liked tea but he had developed a taste for the stronger, too.
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Pongo fidgeted, tail whipping back and forth.
Archie pet the dog on the head before grabbing what he needed for Pongo's own breakfast, giving a snort of laughter at the Dalmatian's scathing stare.
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Archie had never really been a fan of tea, and he suspected he had a slight addiction to caffeine. Trying to wake up on decaf would've been torture.
He doctored his coffee with a bit of milk and took a sip. He blinked, staring into his cup.
"This isn't the instant stuff they provide."
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Once portions were divvied up, there were a few spare sausage patties left in a separate plate. Just in case Archie decided to share some with the dog after all.
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Pongo's focus was solely on that plate of sausages as if he could levitate it to the floor with his mind alone.
After a moment, Archie shook his head, picked up the plate, and set it down on the floor. "The vet'll have my head for all the human food I let you eat."
Pongo ignored the criticism, too focused on the sausages in case Archie changed his mind.
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He settled down, appetite still an unusual thing for him, but the task of putting it all together made it feel more substantial. Like something simpler for him to tackle.
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Pongo lifted his head just enough to tilt his head to one side, wagging his tail.
"Don't give me that innocent look." Archie looked back to Gold with a wry smile. "Can't speak a word of English but always has a lot to say."
He took a bite of his breakfast, pausing to enjoy the taste. It was simple but delicious. Certainly better than anything he'd eaten recently.
"This is really good."
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And to a man who spent much of his mortal life providing, getting his work down, paying to justify the space he took up in merely existing, it was the most natural pattern to fall into. Even two centuries later.
He ate. He'd finished the last half of his sandwich sometime in the night before he fell asleep. It was, thankfully, starting to feel normal again.
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Yesterday's blunder aside, perhaps Archie going after Gold might help the other man in the long run.
For right now, he'd keep it relatively light. "Any major plans for the day? Because right now mine is just periodically walking Pongo and maybe doing another grocery run later if you give me a list." He gave a shrug. "I can cook well enough but it's largely just the same easy things over and over that I cooked in my dorm in college."
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But Belle had been excited at the prospect of travel, and her enthusiasm had been infectious in its own way. She made him see the merit in trying and appreciating new things.
"Even just things that don't exist in Storybrooke?"
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The grand public library, for example.
"If this was anywhere but New York...or Chicago...or LA...or Frisco...I'd want to take a look around."
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He gave a considering look to Gold.
"Were you hoping to go sightseeing after you've rested some?"
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As yesterday had proven.
"At least in Storybrooke there are places I can let Pongo off the leash since everyone in town knows him. He can't really run around here."
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"If you want, I can give you a list of words that wind him up. He's typically very calm so it's not a long list."
One reason why he'd made an excellent therapy dog.
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He took a drink. He wasn't after caffiene, so doing without didn't trouble him much, so long as it tasted right.
"...And I still do not know where things are going. Nothing about my initial plans involved being followed."
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