ptsd is just spicy nostalgia (
billionaires) wrote2018-08-22 10:09 pm
#inbox
Prompts, starters, etc. Anything goes!
Canon point default to after/during Homecoming but feel free to request others.
Prompts, starters, etc. Anything goes!
Canon point default to after/during Homecoming but feel free to request others.
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She had a Complaint, last time... Tony leaves, and Pepper takes a few more moments to tidy up. Compulsive maybe, but she can't stand to leave her desk in anything but tip top shape. Finishing, she smiles slightly to herself; out of satisfaction from completing this simple task, but also in anticipation. It's been a while since they last ordered in and just spent time together, nice and simple. Maybe it's also a chance to get to the bottom of some of the things that have been bothering her, lately.
Pepper beelines for the fridge while Tony wraps up their order, studying their options. She already has a bottle of water in one hand when she calls over her shoulder once Tony's off the phone, "Wanna share a beer?" She rarely drinks a whole one by herself, so.
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"What? Oh... yeah. Sure." He pushes a hand back through his hair and messes it up even more than it was already, all without noticing of course. "Sounds good."
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"So," she starts as she slowly pours half of the beer into one of the glasses. "How was your day?" A banal question, perhaps, and one quite suited to the charade they still keep up, but she is genuinely curious.
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He swallows to get himself to stop rambling, watching her pour the beer and suddenly feeling very thirsty for it.
"Uh - sorry, you?" His gaze flickers up to meet hers, all of his rapt focus on her alone.
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"That's... good, then." The tiny, hesitant pause is unintended, but it slips there regardless of her intentions. No news is good news, right? And still, Pepper can't shake this feeling she keeps having that something is going on Tony hasn't yet shared with her. She slides the glass over to him with a small smile before pouring the rest of the beer into her own glass.
"Much the same, really," she says with a shrug when he turns the tables on her. "Nothing to report." Again, she gives him that brief, tiny smile, idly tapping her fingers against her glass with no obvious intention to drink from it just yet. Instead she simply watches him in silence for a moment, a somewhat pensive look in her eyes-- silence that stretches on and toes the line of being vaguely awkward, though they rarely used to have such between them.
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"Good, that's... yeah. Good." His head bobs into a little nod and he tries not to smile goofily at her but that ship sailed, honestly. He feels giddy for no particular reason, but also sees no reason to hide it from her when they're already getting along so well lately. Ever since he stopped focusing so much on himself and started focusing on their life together. But the smile falters a little because if he succeeds, they won't have a life together anymore.
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"Is everything okay, Tony?" she asks quietly out of the blue as she glances back at him, mostly evenly but not without a faintest hint of a concern leaking into her tone. Instantly, she feels self-conscious about the abrupt question, hurrying to elaborate with some hesitation, "Lately... it just feels like maybe there's something you haven't told me."
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And for the most part? He does. She's used to his eccentricity but even he knows recently he's been at an 11.
"It's like... for the first time in my life? I can see everything clearly and I know I'm on the right path. You ever feel that way?"
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It's not very flattering, so she attempts to school her features into something more neutral, wetting her lips as she considers what he's telling her; as well as the question. She isn't exactly sure what to make of this, still having this niggling sense there's something... more.
"I'm not trying to rain on your parade. It's nice that you've been feeling so cheery. I guess I'm just wondering what's brought that on," she eventually settles on, slowly.
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"What's not to love about my life, huh? Quaint house in the suburbs, beautiful wife, flourishing business..." He trails off, still grinning. Sorry, Pepper, he's insufferable (like she doesn't know.)
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"You're so full of it," she says dryly in return, but a hint of a smile tugs at her own lips. She really hates it when he pulls out the charm, she's not as immune to it as she likes to pretend.
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"You dweeb," she accuses a beat later through her chuckles, catching her breath and wiping her eye. Wow, that was absolutely terrible. And she couldn't have sounded more fond if she'd tried.
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"Since when do you ask me if you can ask me things?" she begins, still clinging to the levity left behind the earlier quip-- but without waiting for a response, her expression turns solemn as well, her head tipping a little with attentiveness.
"What is it?" she asks softly, unable to completely quell a minute prick of concern.
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"Have you thought about what you're gonna do when this is all over?" When they're finally done with Obie and running and all of it?
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"Well... I guess I've always just assumed you might need a hand with whatever crazy plan you'll come up next," she eventually says, with a small shrug of one shoulder and a tiniest smile that has a touch of hesitancy to it. Shrouded as though it is in flippant wording, it's a promise she's not in a hurry to leave his side-- if he needed and wanted it, she would be there for him. To cover up the fact that she suddenly feels emotionally exposed, she adds with a bit more wryness, "I mean, someone needs to keep you out of trouble."
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He reaches out, encircling her wrist with calloused fingers. He's about to say something dumb again, surely, but then that bright hot light floods his head again. Like a migraine that brings friends to throw a rager between your eyeballs. Tony gasps, bowing his head over the table and tightening his grip on her as he tries to work through it. He waits for the images he knows are coming, hoping this time he'll be able to make any sense at all of them. And then, just like that, he snaps out of it, drawing back up in his seat and sinking back in his chair, reluctantly letting go of her so he can curl his hand around his beer glass instead.
"Maybe we should go back to the East Coast," he quests casually, lifting his eyebrows like none of that even happened.
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Pepper stares, speechless by the whole thing, by Tony's follow-up remark.
"Yeah, maybe," she finally says, but she sounds a little peeved now, her upset at him trying to brush off whatever just happened mounting. If he thinks she's going to let that slide by, he must have not been paying attention these past years. "What the hell was that? Are you okay?"
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"Remember when I hit my head?" When some idiot hit his head off the pavement a million times? Yeah, same difference... "That thing with Eduardo's kid wasn't a fluke."
Tony waits for that to sink in before going on. "I get visions. And don't— I know how it sounds, but it's true. I see things and they happen, I can't control it." He laughs low, a self-deprecating sound. "Fake psychic, real visions. Only me, right?"
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"...What?" Her expression scrunches up, nose wrinkling like she's smelling something rotten. For the longest of moments, she can only stare at him in mute disbelief.
"Have you been back to the doctor? What am I saying-- of course you haven't. You wouldn't go voluntarily even if your whole head came off."
Her tone doesn't rise, but she throws her hands up in exasperation and huffs. God save her from this impossible man! Predictably, her first reaction is to look for a culprit in something entirely reasonable, instead of preternatural. "You're right, it sounds-- well, it doesn't sound good! You're telling me you're having... visions? After a pretty significant head trauma, Tony. And based on what I just witnessed, really painful ones."
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He presses the heel of his hand to his eyes, this is about why he didn't tell her.
"It's not that bad." The pain. Except he'd really like an ice pack and ibuprofen about now, really.
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She knows Tony thinks she's overreacting, that much is plain. He always does, though. Pepper on the other hand thinks he never worries enough-- naturally that became her job, when they first began working together.
"No? Clearly that's why you almost toppled over just now," she retorts quietly, a vague edge of disappointment in her tone. She's concerned for him, is that such a terrible crime? If he keels over from brain hemorrhage or something, she'll never forgive herself. Or him, but mostly herself.
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Luckily, that's when the Thai food rings the doorbell and Tony can't get up fast enough, nearly tripping over his own chair on the way to retrieve it. She'll hear his usual pleasantries, the exchange of business cards and Tony tipping the driver heftily before making his way back to her with the containers.
"Wanna eat in the living room?" Like true heathens.
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She opens her mouth to say something more, but the sudden ring of the doorbell startles her; she'd forgotten about their food already, hungry as though she is. She starts all over again when Tony scrambles up like struck with something sharp, the chair scraping across the floor loudly as he pushes it back in his haste. Pepper sighs all over again and stares down into her glass as she waits, listening to Tony's easy rapport with the delivery guy. She's left distinctly unsatisfied with their discussion, but she doesn't know what to do about it.
Glancing up when Tony returns with the food, she manages a weak smile at the suggestion. "Sure," she says, slipping out of her chair slowly. "I'll get us some napkins first."
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