Malcolm lingers near a rack of different papers, turning it idly, keeping half an ear on the conversation but not advertising his presence. He doesn't want to break the spell and make Neal feel bad for spending so long.
He looks at the bag in his hand as they exit the store. "Are you excited or nervous?" he asks.
"Yes," Neal says ironically. But he looks down at the tidily wrapped supplies, and there's still an air of eagerness around him. "I haven't tried to do any art, any real art, even copies in... months. Since the garden house I told you about, the one I was painting, since that burned down."
"No. Yeah. Of course. I don't... have to watch at all," he points out. "This is for you; you need to be as comfortable and free as possible, first and foremost," Malcolm tells him. "I'm sure I can find something else to do. Somewhere else. In the building. There's lots to do."
"You know... I don't want to watch your hand doing practiced perfection. I want to watch your face while you do something that you love," Malcolm tells him.
Neal sets the supplies down by the patio door before coming back to wrap his arms around Malcolm and give him a lingering kiss. “That would be good. Something light. With something alcoholic on the side. I’m curious what their other offerings are like, with the wine being such good quality.”
“What did you have in mind?” Malcolm asks, his fingers fidgeting idly at the buttons of Neal’s shirt. “…Mohitos? Manhattans? …Vodka martinis, shaken not stirred?”
Neal blinks, surprised and charmed at the same time. “I was thinking something more along the lines of a scotch or brandy, but suddenly the idea of a cosmo is very appealing. And it fits better with a light midday meal.”
“Cosmo…” Malcolm murmurs to himself so he remembers, while he pulls the room service menu out of the table under the phone. “Blistered shishito peppers?” Malcolm asks. “Ancient grain bowl?”
"Shishito peppers," Neal says, perking up with interest as Malcolm names possibilities. He joins Malcolm to look at the rest of the menu, resting his chin on and reading over Malcolm's shoulder. "You should try the Crunch Cake, if you don't think it would be too much for you."
Malcolm grins. "Does it go with a cosmo? Maybe I should order a boozy hot chocolate," he says, tilting his head to glance at Neal's profile where it rests on his shoulder.
"Good point. Maybe save that experiment for dinner."
He kisses Malcolm's cheek before straightening up again, feeling surreal in how normal this is. He opens the door to the balcony, stepping out into the cool breeze and warm sun. It's all too perfect.
Neal shakes his head, trying to shed the feeling as he goes back inside to grab his supplies and set up, including a portable easel.
"I went with the soup of the day and the cosmo. I'll have cake for supper," he teases. "Um. How's it going? You haven't really started, right? I brought some books; I can go read until they deliver lunch."
"Not yet." He smiles at Malcolm, the expression a little nervous now. The paper is on the free-standing easel, huge and blank. He has a chair pulled up in front of it, the sets of pastels and pencils on the table in easy reach.
Neal looks back at the paper. "I don't... know what to try drawing first."
"Try this. Close your eyes," he instructs. "Imagine you're standing in the street in front of your house in Mathias. It's a normal day. Something ominous may be lurking somewhere, but it's not going to touch you right now. What do you see?"
Neal closes his eyes when told, then smiles a little as Malcolm goes on. That's easy.
Rather than answering, he picks up the lightest of the pencils and goes to work on the paper, ghosting shapes onto its surface that don't look like anything much yet.
It doesn't take long before he's entirely absorbed.
Malcolm smiles when Neal starts working, then ducks back inside to grab a book, but returning to sit a little ways away, present but not intrusive, reading until the bell rings at their door to announce the arrival of room service.
Neal hears the bell, but doesn't particularly notice it. He's moved on to fractionally darker lines, constructing the view from 1306's front porch, pointed toward the water. A glimpse of the lighthouse over trees, a peak of the ocean. Still mostly abstract, but recognizable.
He glances over when Malcolm comes back, distracted, sees the food--it smells good, it smells amazing, but there's something more important going on right now to focus on. Back to the page.
It'll keep. Malcolm takes his soup bowl and slips back onto his chair, his legs pulled up under him, drinking from the bowl like Japanese tea, watching the picture form. Watching Neal's face, rapt, but not as troubled as before.
He hasn't had real art supplies in ages. He hasn't wanted to touch them, hasn't wanted to risk finding out that he can't do what he used to do. But he doesn't notice the fact right now that there's no tremor in his hand. He doesn't notice the fact that he's doing something original, even. All he's focused on is the unsettling decay of the houses, the way the open sky (slowly going blue under pastel pencils) seems more like a threat than a nice day. The picture taking shape is quaint, should have a Rockwell quality almost, but...
It doesn't. He does it with the angles. He does it with the way he shades things a little darker than they should be here and there, brighter than they should be other places. It makes the whole scene--complete with the people starting to take shape on the hard-packed dirt road--seem like a manic attempt at normalcy.
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He looks at the bag in his hand as they exit the store. "Are you excited or nervous?" he asks.
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"Is it... okay if... I watch?" he asks hesitantly.
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Anxiety roils uncomfortably at the base of his stomach. "Maybe... not the first drawing? So I can see how well..."
A vague gesture with his free hand. He feels queasy asking for accommodation.
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He swallows around the knot in his throat, his voice barely there. "I have to see what I'm even able to do before... I'm ready."
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Once back at the hotel, Malcolm glances out the windows at the mountains.
“Should I just order in some room service for lunch?”
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He kisses Malcolm's cheek before straightening up again, feeling surreal in how normal this is. He opens the door to the balcony, stepping out into the cool breeze and warm sun. It's all too perfect.
Neal shakes his head, trying to shed the feeling as he goes back inside to grab his supplies and set up, including a portable easel.
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"I went with the soup of the day and the cosmo. I'll have cake for supper," he teases. "Um. How's it going? You haven't really started, right? I brought some books; I can go read until they deliver lunch."
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Neal looks back at the paper. "I don't... know what to try drawing first."
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"Try this. Close your eyes," he instructs. "Imagine you're standing in the street in front of your house in Mathias. It's a normal day. Something ominous may be lurking somewhere, but it's not going to touch you right now. What do you see?"
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Rather than answering, he picks up the lightest of the pencils and goes to work on the paper, ghosting shapes onto its surface that don't look like anything much yet.
It doesn't take long before he's entirely absorbed.
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He slips back in to answer it.
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He glances over when Malcolm comes back, distracted, sees the food--it smells good, it smells amazing, but there's something more important going on right now to focus on. Back to the page.
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He hasn't had real art supplies in ages. He hasn't wanted to touch them, hasn't wanted to risk finding out that he can't do what he used to do. But he doesn't notice the fact right now that there's no tremor in his hand. He doesn't notice the fact that he's doing something original, even. All he's focused on is the unsettling decay of the houses, the way the open sky (slowly going blue under pastel pencils) seems more like a threat than a nice day. The picture taking shape is quaint, should have a Rockwell quality almost, but...
It doesn't. He does it with the angles. He does it with the way he shades things a little darker than they should be here and there, brighter than they should be other places. It makes the whole scene--complete with the people starting to take shape on the hard-packed dirt road--seem like a manic attempt at normalcy.
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He puts his empty bowl aside and picks up his cocktail with a quiet clink of dishes.
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