“The mind can be so powerful that it affects the body. But this would be an extreme example. Still… people have manifested illnesses… pregnancy symptoms…” Malcolm explains.
“Yes, but don’t get ahead of the diagnosis, Malcolm,” Gabrielle tells him. “Have any other incidents like the drawing happened?”
“It showed the fire starting, consuming the town, and when I came out of it it was just… scribbles.”
He shivers, looking down, his apprehension back, unsure what else to say. There’s so much he hasn’t. Malcolm trusts Gabrielle. Why is it so much harder for Neal to? He’s been building toward this, in one way or another, almost since he and Malcolm met. Okay maybe it’s not that long ago, but… Neal shivers.
“I would see things sometimes. I do still sometimes. Less lately. But I still feel like some of the monsters I saw there are watching me.”
“Sometimes. More before. Lately it’s been in drawings and dreams, and sometimes I swear they’re there but I can’t see them. Like they’re hiding, but they want me to know they’re present.”
He scrubs a hand through his hair. “Sometimes it is just a bad feeling, just me feeling like something’s going to happen. Other times… it’s more than that.”
It takes him a few long, silent seconds to put his thoughts in order and decide how much of them to share.
In the end he goes for honesty, hanging on to Malcolm’s hand. “It’s like sitting in a dark room you know well, knowing there’s someone in there with you. Not knowing who, or what they’re going to do. But knowing someone is there, without a doubt.”
“Well. Yeah. Of course. But…” Neal has the air of a student who feels like he should be answering an exam question differently. He goes quiet, unsure what intellectual trap Gabrielle is trying to spring.
“What you’re describing is a sort of flashback,” she supplies. “It’s a common symptom of PTSD, but it doesn’t explain your injuries, just that… dread.” She sets her pen down and looks at Malcolm. “That might be enough for one day,” she suggests. “He’s not ready to go deeper.”
“He suggested it first,” Neal says, feeling Gabrielle’s bluntness like a strange kind of slap, a rejection. Like he hasn’t measured up to the required level of brokenness to get help.
“Neal, it takes time, this process. Whatever you’re holding back, you’re not ready to share it yet. That’s okay. We’ve done a lot of work today. Live with it a little bit, process it and - when you feel like you’re ready - come back and we’ll talk some more. In the meantime, I’ll look into Malcolm’s suggestion.”
It soothes him more than he wants to admit, what she says and how she says it. The gentleness there. He doesn’t answer, no, and he doesn’t speak right away even after they leave and catch a cab back toward Malcolm’s place.
Finally, almost back at the apartment, he says abruptly, “Should I have told her more? I should have told her more, shouldn’t I.”
"She just... How's she going to take it when I say I died? When I tell her you were there? Or. Another you." He rubs his forehead. "She can't tell anyone, right? Not without my permission?"
He takes Malcolm’s hand as the cab slows down in front of his apartment. “I’m sure you’re right, I just. It’s one thing to tell June or Mozzie. It’s another thing to tell someone who can make an official record of it.”
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“Yes, but don’t get ahead of the diagnosis, Malcolm,” Gabrielle tells him. “Have any other incidents like the drawing happened?”
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He’s calmed a little, at least. Enough that it’s clear he’s not going to get up and leave immediately.
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"What did you draw while in the trance?" she asks Neal.
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This was a mistake.
“…Mathias burning,” he says quietly. “And it moved. It moved and changed while I was drawing it.”
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Malcolm looks at him and nods encouragement, like he can see his faith waning.
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He shivers, looking down, his apprehension back, unsure what else to say. There’s so much he hasn’t. Malcolm trusts Gabrielle. Why is it so much harder for Neal to? He’s been building toward this, in one way or another, almost since he and Malcolm met. Okay maybe it’s not that long ago, but… Neal shivers.
“I would see things sometimes. I do still sometimes. Less lately. But I still feel like some of the monsters I saw there are watching me.”
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He scrubs a hand through his hair. “Sometimes it is just a bad feeling, just me feeling like something’s going to happen. Other times… it’s more than that.”
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In the end he goes for honesty, hanging on to Malcolm’s hand. “It’s like sitting in a dark room you know well, knowing there’s someone in there with you. Not knowing who, or what they’re going to do. But knowing someone is there, without a doubt.”
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“Neal, it takes time, this process. Whatever you’re holding back, you’re not ready to share it yet. That’s okay. We’ve done a lot of work today. Live with it a little bit, process it and - when you feel like you’re ready - come back and we’ll talk some more. In the meantime, I’ll look into Malcolm’s suggestion.”
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Finally, almost back at the apartment, he says abruptly, “Should I have told her more? I should have told her more, shouldn’t I.”
He could have gotten a better grade at therapy.
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He takes Malcolm’s hand as the cab slows down in front of his apartment. “I’m sure you’re right, I just. It’s one thing to tell June or Mozzie. It’s another thing to tell someone who can make an official record of it.”
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“I’ve never thought of myself as… as an ‘official record’ in there,” he admits. “…Maybe I have a blind spot,” he concedes uneasily.
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