[tom=http://i.imgur.com/uOGhQE6.png, #ffd265]This had been a long time coming. And no matter how much he'd prepared, Toby was overwhelmingly jittery. He hadn't started them off with this, but he hoped it wasn't too late, now that everything was catching up with him and sinking in. He'd never felt quite like this about much of anything. It made his hands shake and his heart ache, his knees feeling like they were going to give out from under him. It left him thinking about far too much in the middle of the night, repeating memories obsessively, and when they settled in his chest, they were real.
Felix was real. On his own, Toby wasn't so great with… sorting out emotions, pinning them down, expressing them verbally or in ways others would understand. He couldn't usually be bothered to force anyone to get it. Ever since he was a kid, it'd been one of the most difficult things in the world. He let people make assumptions and called it a day. There wasn't a point in making wasted efforts towards anything else, it only hurt him, and then they'd find out he was sensitive. Disgusting, frankly, and invited the fuckers to take advantage of it.
But standing outside this damn fancy restaurant, reservations made, it'd be hard to deny he'd been prying himself open for Felix and showing him… things that were clumsy, new, but earnest. Painfully earnest. He'd made stupid mistakes and tripped over his feet plenty of times, but got up again, a thickness in his throat and a need for everything to turn out okay. Marrying Felix had been first like a daydream, then like skydiving, a rush of-- realization, of feelings that'd gone unnamed being given names and purpose. How their relationship had evolved was bizarre and surreal, but he'd fought for that. He'd fought for this, at every turn, inching out of his comfort zone and trying, trying to make this person understand. In the process, he'd been causing himself to understand. There were two things he knew, now.
They were together. He hadn't been able to bear anything else. And he'd grown.
Toby took a deep breath, fingers brushing over the little box in his pocket. It was funny that something that small in size could be so fucking expensive, but the thing was, he knew why. He'd spent the money because he was a big dumb lovestruck idiot, and he was pretty sure he'd do anything to see Felix smile-- and not the placeholder, 'I'm talking to filthy normies' smile, one with genuine happiness-- for even half a moment. That would've sounded like some irrational bullshit to him, a year ago. He still thought it was ridiculous.
But he couldn't live without this ridiculous, and by now, had long acknowledged that. So, Toby, waiting in his most flattering suit, light blue and sleek, contacts in his eyes and bags hidden with makeup, hair neat, was about as cleaned up and bright as he should've looked on their wedding day, something he didn't want Felix to miss. He was excited, and nervous, and hopeful that everything would be perfect, and if it wasn't perfect, enough for Felix to know that he'd done his best to get close to that. He texted Felix about meeting him at the classiest place for dinner on the ship, and that yes, he had reservations. The sun was setting soon, leaving the sky stunning, and they were going to be seated out on the deck to best view that and the ocean.
Christ, he was such a pretentious jackass. And it mattered. Because Felix did. What was the moral of the story here? Being a pretentious jackass was fine, as long as you were in love? Apparently.
There were a lot of thoughts, words, feelings, actions, gifts, absurdity, but it all really came down to one thing.
Love.
Pretty simple, Toby told himself, while his cheeks burned and his heart did this thing it liked to do where he could only describe it as screaming.[/tom]
Felix was real. On his own, Toby wasn't so great with… sorting out emotions, pinning them down, expressing them verbally or in ways others would understand. He couldn't usually be bothered to force anyone to get it. Ever since he was a kid, it'd been one of the most difficult things in the world. He let people make assumptions and called it a day. There wasn't a point in making wasted efforts towards anything else, it only hurt him, and then they'd find out he was sensitive. Disgusting, frankly, and invited the fuckers to take advantage of it.
But standing outside this damn fancy restaurant, reservations made, it'd be hard to deny he'd been prying himself open for Felix and showing him… things that were clumsy, new, but earnest. Painfully earnest. He'd made stupid mistakes and tripped over his feet plenty of times, but got up again, a thickness in his throat and a need for everything to turn out okay. Marrying Felix had been first like a daydream, then like skydiving, a rush of-- realization, of feelings that'd gone unnamed being given names and purpose. How their relationship had evolved was bizarre and surreal, but he'd fought for that. He'd fought for this, at every turn, inching out of his comfort zone and trying, trying to make this person understand. In the process, he'd been causing himself to understand. There were two things he knew, now.
They were together. He hadn't been able to bear anything else. And he'd grown.
Toby took a deep breath, fingers brushing over the little box in his pocket. It was funny that something that small in size could be so fucking expensive, but the thing was, he knew why. He'd spent the money because he was a big dumb lovestruck idiot, and he was pretty sure he'd do anything to see Felix smile-- and not the placeholder, 'I'm talking to filthy normies' smile, one with genuine happiness-- for even half a moment. That would've sounded like some irrational bullshit to him, a year ago. He still thought it was ridiculous.
But he couldn't live without this ridiculous, and by now, had long acknowledged that. So, Toby, waiting in his most flattering suit, light blue and sleek, contacts in his eyes and bags hidden with makeup, hair neat, was about as cleaned up and bright as he should've looked on their wedding day, something he didn't want Felix to miss. He was excited, and nervous, and hopeful that everything would be perfect, and if it wasn't perfect, enough for Felix to know that he'd done his best to get close to that. He texted Felix about meeting him at the classiest place for dinner on the ship, and that yes, he had reservations. The sun was setting soon, leaving the sky stunning, and they were going to be seated out on the deck to best view that and the ocean.
Christ, he was such a pretentious jackass. And it mattered. Because Felix did. What was the moral of the story here? Being a pretentious jackass was fine, as long as you were in love? Apparently.
There were a lot of thoughts, words, feelings, actions, gifts, absurdity, but it all really came down to one thing.
Love.
Pretty simple, Toby told himself, while his cheeks burned and his heart did this thing it liked to do where he could only describe it as screaming.[/tom]