Layla had woken up with no Jamie beside her, and for a moment felt a queer sort of panic that made her question her sanity more than the island usually did. After a moment, during which time Richards had slunk up the bed to tuck his wet nose against her jaw and wag his tail a little, she recalled that she had been up, earlier, to let the dog in,
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She'd let the damn dog in. The dog, who I purposefully left outside of the room last night. The dog, who I might remind you, is named after a certain Mr. Fantastic.
Yelling Richards' name at the sky, it turns out, is remarkably therapeutic. It's no wonder Doom does it so often.
Jamie'd already been to the Rec Centre and back by the time he crossed paths with Layla, showered, if no less internally frustrated from the morning's cancelled plans. Though in reality he felt no better than he had the night before, save for having regained some of the color in his cheeks, there was nevertheless a renewed vigor to his step. His shoulders were pushed back, his head held higher -- with two fingers pressed above his temple in a sort of mock salute, he tipped his chin forward, and said, "Top o' the morning to you, Layla. You're looking.... acclimatized."
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Layla stood still for a moment while a few dozen quips whipped through her head, before she started forward at a run and only stopped when she had her arms around his neck. She kissed him.
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Letting out a muffled sigh against her mouth, his hands easily found her hips, tugging her closer without much thought to their location. He turned them on the spot, leaning up against a nearby tree, wincing a little as a branch dug into one of his bruises, just enough to startle him into breaking away, breathless. His gaze lowering first to her mouth, and then back up to her eyes, he asked, "Jeez, if you wanted to do that, why'd you let the dog in?"
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"You're the center of his black and white universe."
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"I thought you might be dead," Layla told him, because after days of not talking to him, flirting or shooting the shit or not talking, in pointed italics, were all great options but she had to tell him, at least something of what she'd gone through. Something to explain the crying, at least.
"Not this morning. Before."
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Lips pressed together, he lifted a hand to brush back a few stray hairs from her face, staring at her intently like she was a mystery he couldn't quite crack, though she'd just been remarkably straightforward. After a long beat, he added, "But I didn't do that, either. I'm here, Layla, and very much alive. I... don't know what else to tell you. That's all I got."
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"I can't... I thought knowing was bad enough. This is..."
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"I need to hear about your expedition," she said after a moment, trying to rally.
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"I hit Iron Man with a folding chair before he sank his yacht."
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"I didn't follow up. I was kind of busy." She glanced up at him, eyebrows quirking toward her hairline.
"Not that I'm an expert, but it sort of looked like the last act of a desperate man. He wouldn't happen to have a terminal illness, would he?"
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