[ walking home from the coffee shop had felt like it had taken years. he hadn't meant to walk so far, only truly intended to head up to the same bus stop from before and hitch into town but by the time he got his wits about him again, he'd made half the trek there in the cold.
returning to the dorms felt like nothing short of a prison - the halls eerily quiet, the lights off, not even a student greeter at the door. just the beep of his badged key and the squeak of the glass door shutting behind him. only a few students remained during the holiday, and most that had didn't even live in his building. so tim perched in his room, coming out only for his sparingly few meals per day, and tried his best to busy himself with reading.
even jumping on cam hadn't been on his mind, though he did it in an attempt to make up some more money to pay for his books, his meal card next semester. he'd even made a call home to wish them a merry christmas - his mother had been happy to hear from him, but his father refused to come onto the phone, as usual. there would be no help from staten island.
and so christmas dinner for tim laughlin had been a cup of ramen, a stained copy of locke's second treatise of government for his thesis, and a glass of water. he heralds in the new year much the same way. it's lonely. and maybe it was lonely before and he'd simply had the tools with which to ignore it - the fantasy. the idealistic, stupid dreams of a boy who can barely survive college, let alone the real world.
he reads the same passage of locke twenty times before he finally throws it across the room.
the isolation of break has settled into his bones, however, and even the bustle of the start of the semester does little to shake it off. arthur ribs him for being boring, mary voices quiet concern but doesn't bother to ask any real questions, and a few members of faculty give him looks. even professor fuller doesn't press him like he used to, and he does his best to keep his head down and take diligent notes for later. he answers when called on, turns assignments in on time, fills the air when his professors look for answers from a dead-eyed class, but otherwise, tim laughlin keeps to himself.
it's no different today, either. professor fuller's class is interesting, engaging, and maybe at some point in the past he'd have piped up to question his flow chart on political and manufacturing consent, but he simply doodles the notes down in his notebook, brow furrowed as he marks questions for himself in the margins. the very same questions he'd have allowed space for in the discussion. instead, he'll spend time in the library later.
he's just gotten his bag packed and started for the door when he hears his name. he pauses for a moment, turning to look at professor fuller, and he cannot help the strange tightness that rises up into his chest. it makes it a little hard to breathe, really, and he has no doubt the apprehension shows on his face.
a few students pass him, glancing back curiously of course. timothy laughlin is never asked to stay after class - not in this way. his hands flex around the strap of his bag and he lets out a little breath before approaching the man who stands, gesturing at the door. ]
I have another class in an hour, and I need to try to head back to the dorm for lunch.
[ a quiet, but polite warning. a note that he cannot stay long, whatever this is. he's out of meals for the week, having been unable to quite cover the cost of the extended meal plan on top of his text books. so ramen or a peanut butter sandwich it is for lunch. it beats nothing.
he falls into line beside professor fuller, though makes certain there is a measured distance between them still. ]
I turned my outline in late, I apologize. It got away from me - had a lot of reading frontloaded in this semester that I tried to get done. I understand if you can't accept it past the deadline.
[of course tim doesn't look thrilled to have been summoned, and he supposes it's doubled by the fact that hawk is the one to have initiated it and that others seem curious about the abnormal circumstances. but hawk ignores them, waiting to fall into place behind tim and lock up the classroom once its emptied out. unfortunately for tim, the comments about lunch back at the dorm fly over his head in the sense that he assumes tim plans to simply eat food at the dorm while attempting to catch up, not that the food in his dorm room is all he has left. if he did, it would have him wonder uncomfortably just how hard up he is for cash - and what that means he's willing to do to get more of it. especially now that he's not getting an extra five-hundred bucks a week from hawk.
an uncomfortable silence envelops them on the walk to his office, even though he prefers to bring everything up with the added privacy of a closed door and no one likely to interrupt unless craig happens to saunter down the hallway and off to the right from the sociology wing. hawk's got a whole corner to himself at the opposite end, and it's not the first time tim has been here by any means, but he can guess with confidence it'll definitely be the most awkward. he holds open the door for his student, waving a hand to usher him inside before closing it behind them and heading towards the solid mahogany desk in front of a wall of books and dc trinkets, gifts from dean smith and accolades from his own time at the university.
he presses his hands together, elbows on the desk and leans forward to listen to tim's apology.]
It's alright. I'm not worried about the outline, and I'll accept it, on one condition.
[his eyes try to seek out what this might be, if he'd gone and fucked it all up with his mistake. is this all his fault?]
You haven't been yourself in class lately. Quiet. Keeping to yourself.
You were - mentioned at our recent department faculty meeting, actually. Everyone's under the impression you've been out of character.
[his lips purse slightly, fingers flexing against each other.]
I imagine I'm the last person you want to hear this from, but are you alright?
[his hands part, palms going flat against the shiny, lacquered surface as he leans in and drops his voice.]
Is this - because of what happened over break?
[what happened between us? is the unspoken implication.]
[ tim follows in silence alongside professor fuller, keeping his eyes ahead and counting every step he takes to try and keep his breathing and heart rate under control. his palms have already started sweating around the strap of his bag, but he can at least blame that on the heat of the classrooms - the radiators still going at full tilt even though this january is proving to be slightly warmer.
he gives a sheepish nod to some of his other professors in the political science wing as he follows hawk to that corner office he knows well. he's stopped in here many times between classes - most of the time to ask questions about a point in class, or to have him look at a paper before turning it in. other times, simply because he's enjoyed talking to him - needing company in the bustle of the busy day and using a current political event as fodder for that.
but he looks at the door in dread today, stepping inside once he's ushered in and settles in the chair across from the man's desk. he gathers his bag into his lap so as not to remove it from round his torso, but also to have something to hold onto. ]
A condition?
[ he tilts his head, brow furrowing faintly in genuine curiousity. it fades as professor fuller continues to speak and he swallows hard, fingers curling against the worn, near dilapidated faux leather of his satchel. ]
Oh. I'm fine, really.
[ the faculty meet, tim knows that, but how he came to be the topic of one of their department meetings, he doesn't know. he shifts uncomfortably in the chair, wishing suddenly that his answer would be enough, that he could be released so he could get out into the quad and catch his breath. it's so hard to breathe lately. ]
It's not - nothing happened over break. [ good boy, he can almost hear, as though the faceless man might praise him for sticking well to the narrative they built on the snowy sidewalks near the coffee shop. this conversation didn't happen. he lets out a little breath and glances down at his hands, fidgeting before he glances back up, watching as hawk leans in over the fine wood of his desk.
this office once felt a safe haven - shelves of books, old awards hanging on the wall, photographs from older days at georgetown - a place where he has sat cross-legged in this very chair and argued vehemently some point that professor fuller entertained simply out of kindness. he can see that now, zoomed out on everything - how the man puts up with him. how so many people and faculty smile and nod and let him talk himself in circles.
was he always wasting his breath? ]
The break was just a little long, that's all. Difficult, I guess. Sleep schedule is a little messed up, and I got behind on my research. [ he shrugs one shoulder, glancing up at the man and giving a half, small smile. ]
I'm just really trying to focus, take good notes, make sure I take everything in. I... I have a habit of interrupting classes when I shouldn't. I'm not the one with the degree, after all. It may give others the opportunity to... to participate more. That's all.
[ he wants to bolt. never has he felt nervous energy like this in his life, and yet right here, across from hawkins fuller, he feels as though the chair itself is made of lighting. like all that energy is dumping somewhere and it has nowhere to go but into the bends of his ankles, his knees. ]
Really, I'm fine. I'll... I'll make a better effort to speak up in class. Please apologize to them for me. I wasn't trying to be rude. I - ...really should be going.
[christ, tim looks like a caged animal, or more aptly - one of those dogs in an aspca commercial with nervous eyes huddling in on itself from a confined space. the confident boy who would come in here, bag at his side and gesturing animatedly while chatting him up on everything from genocide in palestine to us foreign policy in china is nowhere to be found. that bag might as well be a barricade to protect himself from hawk, and the panicked energy roiling off of him is palpable. it makes hawk's lips twist into a small frown, wondering if the seeming erosion of confidence is also his fault. what else would it be? he's wrongly assumed any of those money problems would have disappeared with the three grand he'd sent back to boot.
i'm fine was the answer he'd been dreading, but predicted in some way. brushing it off, pretending all was well. and he supposes there's no one to blame but himself - considering he did insist they both pretend that nothing at all happened over break. and tim follows suit, enough that it prompts that good boy in his own mind, too, and hawk glances away for a brief moment to wet his lips and will away the inappropriate intrusion.]
You've got a heavy course load this semester, I get it. I'm not trying to add to that.
[he tilts his head slightly, trying to get tim to meet his gaze and see the honest to god compassion in his gaze. it's not any different than he ever was in this context before, because hawkins fuller had always been a teacher first, and frankly a damn good one. one who cares about his students, who would have noticed this change in tim without the faculty meeting or if that disastrous meetup have never happened at all. it's not like he stopped caring from then until now - it's just...complicated. but he has no idea his words have turned tim upside down, the cause for his heartache and retreating back into a shell he didn't know existed.]
If your last essay was anything to go by, you've been taking excellent notes. But try and give yourself a break - get some rest this weekend if you can. Work yourself to the bone and you'll burn out.
[god, everything seems like it's a step too far now, doesn't it? his eyes widen for a moment, hoping tim knows he means work as in simply school work. so he barrels ahead.]
And by the way, you're never interrupting. Those interruptions happen to be the highlight of most of my classes. You got almost half the students involved that day you brought up McCarthyism two months ago, remember that? Last few weeks and I haven't heard a peep from you, even when I brought up Vietnam. Feels a little like I've been left hanging.
[it feels like he's going in a circle again - like tim is reading something between the lines that isn't there. it makes hawk's shoulders sag a little in disappointment, leaning back in his chair and watching tim's desperation to leave.]
Look - none of this is a criticism. We're just concerned about a student that's made a lasting impression on his professors, is all.
[ tim keeps his eyes glued to his hands, fingers picking idly at some of the leather's facing that has begun to chip and peel. he leaves little brown flecks everywhere he goes these days, but the bag only has to make it one more year. one more year and he'll be able to apply for internships, get out in the world and try to do something more with himself than starve and fuck himself on camera every night.
fuller mentions his paper and his eyes pop up at that, his brow dipping again, his lips pulling. ]
The topic was boring. I copied my notes nearly verbatim and it got me an A.
[ and the first tasks of a semester usually are simpler - a warmup for students coming back after a long stretch away. but the lack of challenge had been infuriating when he's already got so little to bump up against. his course load is no different this semester than last - he can handle the work, the stress, the pressure. but he can't handle everything else. ]
And I'm sorry if you felt I've left you hanging. I wasn't aware I had that sort of responsibility. None of the other students are expected to participate the way that I have - I just...
[ he shakes his head, taking in a slow, deep breath and trying to center himself again. professional. calm. polite. metered and measured and carefully doled out. ]
And Vietnam itself is too broad a topic to engage on in a fifty minute lecture. Why would I waste valuable time broaching that topic when I'd be the only one in the room speaking?
[ professional. calm. polite. he repeats it like a mantra as he takes another breath but something gets away from him when professor fuller insists again on getting rest. what is rest, when one's whole world depends on fundraising to make it to the next semester? every moment is a race, a dash to the finish just to try and make it, when so many of the students around him come from old money and the who-knows-who of academia. ]
And I'll admit I'm frankly surprised you didn't fail this paper as well. I made a point to be as neutral as I could be. No real creative thinking, no out of the box theorizing. Nothing that could be called naive or idealistic - Vietnam would be a bad topic. Too polarizing, especially now that we have technology to look back on our strategies and weaponization.
[ he shrugs again, shifting to the edge of his seat, his knee bouncing absently. he opens up his satchel and draws out his notebook from class, rifling through it until he peels out the essay he'd been handed back today. if hawk peeks, he can see tim's questions blotted in the margins - vietnam circled with bullet points underneath - the old tim written out in ink instead of spoken out loud.
he reaches to set the paper on professor fuller's desk. ]
Your syllabus for this was too vague. If you truly wanted my opinion, I'd have failed this assignment as well. I don't speak up in class because I don't see a need to - it isn't personal, professor. I want to talk about the world I want to see, and maybe that's not realistic. Maybe that's childish, but if this is what you want, then you should keep this.
[ he closes his notebook, his satchel, and rises. ]
I have to go. The shuttle doesn't come to my dorm after lunch, and I have to get back there and up the hill again. I can't be late.
[the well-loved, probably faux leather covering the bag that is clearly on its last leg does not escape hawk's notice, nor does the way it seems to mimic tim's overall existence at the moment. worn out, bone tired, in need of some relief. that's why it surprises him when some semblance of the student he'd been so used to crops back up - the obvious frustration at the topic, the honest criticism of hawk's own syllabus, which isn't that drastically different from last semester's, and the commentary he's clearly been holding back spelled out on stark white. he's still in there, hawk realizes, and thank god - but it's clear there's been damage done both to his confidence and probably his wallet, even if that's an elephant in the room they're both dancing around very carefully.
that doesn't mean he's going soft on his teaching, or that he's going to cut tim more of a break than anyone else - even if he wants to. hawk leans forward again when tim stands, chin tipping up to draw his attention and silently indicate not to leave - not yet.]
You know how much easier my job would be if every student participated like you? Class would be a hell of a lot more engaged.
[he offers a brief, but wry smile, a twinkle in the washed blue sparkling in his eye.]
Look, it's not about Vietnam. And you don't have any responsibility or obligation to me, god no - nor am I looking for you to change any of your opinions overnight. I may have...commented on your leanings in the past, but it's only because the reality of Washington is a whole other beast I have no doubt you'll be in the mouth of someday. I'm not doing you the disservice of letting you walk in like a lamb.
[which is what he feels like he's doing, in essence, by cutting him off from an extra $500 a week he probably desperately needs. hawk rubs at his jaw absently again, watching as tim stuffs his things back into his bag and disperses some of his jittery nerves, clearly ready to leave, even if hawk isn't ready to let him go. he leaves tim's paper on the desk, already knowing he's going to go through it again with a fine-tooth comb and wonder if he was too soft and just trying not to rock the boat. and if he did, then that means he's failed on some level and he won't fucking do that again.
hawk finally stands too, taking a step towards the door to try and block him off from leaving without some kind of resolution.]
Going up the Hill and back is a pretty long way for lunch. I've got some snacks here if it'll save you the trip.
[hawk has never felt the need to explain himself to anyone, to fill awkward silences instead of letting someone else stew in them to a point, but he's stalling in a way, trying to dig deeper into the root of the issue here. the thought of letting tim walk out that door without any resolution makes him feel a steadily growing knot in his chest. he jabs a thumb back towards the door in the direction of the main lobby, where helpful maps and pamphlets and student guides and the administration staff sit.]
Got a new secretary at the front desk this year, and I think she's trying to fatten me up with all this stuff.
I understand that the leanings of Washington are far more difficult, critical, and torrential to navigate. I know that the reality of our government means that our democracy will never be a true democratic republic. We've been far from that notion for the better part of a century, but what's the point of going into all of this if I don't keep sight of the world I want to see.
[ he can't help the way he's getting fired up over it, the way his shoulders hitch up, the way his hands loosen on his bag to gesture. he even backs up a half step when hawk blocks the door, and something about the closeness, the way the man cages him into his office loosens something in him. there's a fire in tim laughlin that he cannot control - a passion he has no gauge for. there's no spigot to turn it on and turn it off, and with it comes great advantages and even greater consequences. ]
I know that I world I want to see will never come to fruition. Honestly, it's better that it doesn't. Extremes on either end are bound to fail - strict dichotomies are already the heart of what's fracturing American politics. But if I go into all of this knowing that it's dark and terrible, and that I have to transmogrify the way I think to fit that mold the moment I fall into the orbit of someone with power, influence - then why am I even trying? I appreciate your concern and your watchful eye, Professor Fuller, and I am sorry that I have not engaged in your classes more this month.
[ he lets out a little breath, shakes his head, and looks back up at the man. there's a fire in tim's eyes, whether he realizes it or not. ]
I want to believe that there's good in people. Even if they don't believe that there's any good in me. Or if that good has a valuation, an expectation attached to it. Do you think that any of those faculty members would ask about me, care about me, if they knew?
[ the word knew sits heavy on the air between them, and color rises up into the high points of his cheeks. ]
I went to the chapel that day and prayed. For a solution, for something different, for anything to change. I have prayed my whole life for a path forward that's clearer, not easier. Forgive me, then, if I have been quiet. I'm doing everything I can to figure out where the ground falls beneath my feet. I've lost your respect, and no matter what either of us wanted then - I never wanted that.
[ it's almost childish to say it out loud - to look professor fuller in the eye and admit to the way he's all but idolized him in his time here. the way he has soaked up the attention and the care, the intellectual battles, the conversations had in this very same doorway.
he swallows hard and looks away then, to the old watch on his wrist. the glass face is dull and worn, the band soft, the clasp tarnished. everything about tim laughlin is well-loved items, handmedowns handled with care, and the careful curation of necessities. ]
My class is in half an hour. It's Dr. Lonigan's class - I can't be late or he won't let me in.
[it's not that he's trying to upset tim or push him into something - it's that he's seen the torrent of fervor in him and a light that shines brighter than he ever did, ever will, and frankly more than any other student he's taught over the last five years. washington has a reputation for chewing up its interns, aides, and the generally pure-hearted up with razor sharp teeth and spitting them back out into a colder, more miserable world - but tim has tenacity, a doggedly fierce will that he thinks can weather the storm. it's why he's never sought to stamp out the ideals he's so determined to implement into this world - moreso just shape them into something a little sharper, able to penetrate the cloud of muck that surrounds government work and the corrupt, jaded, old windbags that make up majority of capitol hill.
and it's why listening to tim even now brings him a glimpse of that raw potential once more, reminds him it's still in there and hasn't been destroyed. well thank christ, because hawk isn't sure he'd be able to live with that fuck up. so he leans back slightly, something like pride blooming in his chest and in the small quirk of his lips upward as he listens to tim practically preaching about democracy and the failed state of a two-party political system.]
I'm not looking for an apology. No one is. But that -
[he points towards tim's chest, towards the way his entire body has been energized with this new fire, the whole of what's been missing for the past few weeks.]
- that's who we've been missing in our classes.
[because the faculty loves him, really. which makes the air feel like it's been sucked out of the room when tim poignantly asks if his goodness and perspective and worth is somehow attached to a purity contest and a question of morality. it makes his face fall, jaw flexing and lips pressing together in a firm line as his brows furrow. the sigh that comes out of him is deep-seated and already seemingly exhausted by what he has to say. of course he knows what tim is getting at. and the reality is: yes. there are assholes in this building probably sitting some forty feet from them who would judge tim laughlin for selling his body on the internet to make ends meet. and hawk doesn't think he needs to hear that from him - or that he's really looking for the answer. but there's one thing he can't abide by, so he stands to his full height and lowers his voice with the kind of conviction that's rare even in his classes, instead preferring to play the neutral and encouraging guide or the sardonic cynic, bringing everyone down to reality.]
There is good in people if you know where to look. Far and few between, and believe me when I say - you're one of the few. And the kind of good you're talking about, that I and other members of this faculty see in you?
That's priceless. Don't you forget it.
[his gaze flickers down to the flush on tim's cheekbones, the way it singes up towards his ears and reminds him immediately and inconveniently of the fact that his whole body does the same under certain circumstances. it makes him think about that day outside the coffee shop again, tim shivering and looking utterly crushed. the kid is struggling with more than just his schoolwork, all these invisible expectations from a god that hawk doesn't believe exist, from the judgment and scorn he thinks he'd earn from his peers and his mentors. it's an overstep to give him the atheist playbook right now, but hawk looks up sharply when tim asks for forgiveness. what forgiveness does he need?
and why does he think hawk has lost respect for him?]
Hey, time out. You'll make it to Lonigan's just fine, but back up a minute.
[a step towards tim, and then another - one closer than he should. but he needs to meet his eyes, to make him understand. his voice is firm and insistent, with the kind of patience he's granted tim as he works through the more complex structures and concepts in their office hours before this whole mess started.]
Look at me.
[and he doesn't continue until tim complies, honeyed brown through those thick lenses so expressive and chin quivering ever so slightly from his ardent declarations moments before.]
You haven't lost my respect.
There's nothing you could do there that would ever make that happen. I don't know what God or Lonigan or anyone else thinks, but that's what you're hearing from me. Nothing has changed between us, do you understand?
Things won't be this difficult forever. That's hard to hear without the evidence - but it will change. Especially for someone like you who is constantly pushing himself to fly.
[icarus with the scalded wings.
the sudden flash of gold catches his attention, and hawk walks back to his desk to pull out some granola bars, chocolates, and some organic energy bites - whatever the fuck those are.]
These aren't winning any awards for the most balanced meal, but here. So you won't be late. I know Lonigan's a hardass about that.
[ that's who we've been missing in our classes, the man says and something in tim's chest feels like it cracks open. maybe it's the weight of getting so much of what he's said out in the open for the first time in two months, maybe it's just the pressure of being cornered by professor fuller here in his office. either way, warmth blooms in his chest, makes his face feel warm, makes his eyes almost threaten to burn.
he feels inexplicably tired, suddenly, even though the fight that he'd thought had run out of him is simply waiting, buzzing and jittering in his chest, making his heart pound heavy still. he opens his mouth to rebut something about goodness, something about a special something that tim supposedly has, but he closes it again. he doesn't believe whatever notion of goodness that is - no one with that kind of goodness turns his back on his family, tries to reconcile god with his life, does the kind of work that he does - but he could spend hours over that.
instead, he's drawn back out to professor fuller approaching, getting closer and closer, until he's all but forced to look up at him. it's a reflex, anyway, to obey him in this way. a command, even with the teacherly patience he's heard semester after semester. he blinks up at him, meeting his gaze, feeling strangely small now with the breadth and height of the man so close to him.
but he stares, silently up at him, shaken to the core by his words - you haven't lost my respect. ]
The way you spoke. Ah - before. [ at the park, in the cold, before christmas... ] Made it sound like you questioned... my free time. Like I was doing more than what you'd already expected to see from me. Worse, maybe.
[ especially when i don't know what they're up to outside of class.
tim shifts his weight, instinctively leaning onto one foot that creates a hint of space between them. but he can feel the heat of professor fuller from here, even smell the rich notes of his undoubtedly expensive aftershave, and he looks away from him then, down at his hands again, then back up because he knows he will be expected to speak to him face to face.
but professor fuller whisks away to this desk, drawing up snacks from somewhere, and tim at first stares for a moment at the pile of things on the lacquered top, then back up to him. tim takes a step toward the desk, closer to hawk. ]
I'm not that. I do what I have to do, and that day - before - was the only time. I know that what I have to do isn't right. That I should have just taken the scholarship I was given for SUNY and been satisfied with that - but I had to try. I want to be here, Professor Fuller. I want to do something good with all of this and I'm trying.
[ his jaw quivers, his throat swells with a hint of emotion but tim tries to suck in a deep breath, to temper the burning, dangerous, desperate little thing trying to crawl its way out from between his ribs. what would there be around his heart if not a lion, desperately clawing its way to the surface, unwilling to back down even when defeat seems imminent. ]
But I keep hearing what you said - over and over. When I saw it was you, I was glad. I trust you, probably more than I trust myself. And I get all of it - why you can't, why you don't want to - it's nothing about that. But I don't know how to reconcile the Tim Laughlin you knew before and the one who is here in front of you.
[ he huffs something like a desperate little noise, finally takes a step back, his hands coming to his hips. ]
I don't run around in my free time. I don't do anything more than what you've already seen. I don't have friends, I don't have family here, I barely survive just trying to pay my tuition every semester and just hope I get it in time to get seats in the classes I know I'll need or to get the right meal plan, or get the right books on time. I have nothing - but this school and these classes.
[ he runs a hand back through his hair, letting out a shaken breath and then furiously wipes at the corner of one eye beneath the dark rims of this glasses. how embarrassing. ]
I'm tired of pushing myself to fly when it never leads me anywhere good. I respect you a great deal, Professor Fuller. I... I want to do right by your classes and learn as much as I can from you while I'm still able to be here, but I'm just going to disappoint you. Because I am that same student, but I'm also the guy in the dark room with a camera who you can't trust.
[ his hands finally fall back to their sides.
there's no point in making lonigan's class. he won't be able to listen, to focus. he'll just have to be diligent in the future - not miss another so as not to drop his grade. ]
It's just the first time I've ever felt ashamed of it. For just trying to make it.
[tim doesn't realize that hawk has played that fateful morning over in his head as if on an old, rickety projector - damn near memorized everything that was exchanged between them before he'd left his student out in the cold - literally and metaphorically. most of his break was spent strategizing, wondering how he was going to mitigate this disaster and frankly expecting that not to be the end of it. not because he didn't trust tim's honesty and principles - but because it's just ingrained, second nature never to trust anyone, especially not with the kind of secrets that get you fired or worse, plastered on front page news. loose lips, as they say. but seeing tim now, the way he hesitates to meet fuller's gaze - there's something more eating at him from the inside out. it's not the rejection, which hawk still doesn't fully understand, it's -
oh. of course.
of course timothy laughlin would worry that hawk thought him to be dishonest in some way, that he was disgusted by the idea of his outside activities. it's been a clear misunderstanding, and hawk shakes his head adamantly even as tim's voice escalates and wavers slightly between these raw, heartfelt confessions. if he felt like the air was sucked out of the room before, now it's downright suffocating. these emotions - aren't what he has ever signed up for. not to say that he hasn't offered a box of tissues to a student going through a mental breakdown, or having unexpectedly lost a family member, but this? this is a whole different ballgame, an intimacy created between them that frankly neither signed up for. something he's never navigated, and hopefully never fucking will long after tim graduates.
but for now, he's not going to let the boy just walk around thinking he's dirty because of it.]
Tim.
[he looks up from his desk, pushing the drawer shut before walking back towards him and slotting in close once more. it's almost too easy the way it feels right to be here, just shy of inappropriate. but they're long since past that now, aren't they? hawk tips his head, glancing downward at where tim's eyes are glassy behind his thick lenses.
it'd be a lie to say he didn't see something of himself in there, from once upon a time. a boy who liked pretty things, sensitive friends, grew too attached to them both and lost all of it, along with his father's respect and whatever foolishly optimistic future he thought he might have back then. instead he'd locked it all away and thrown away the key, barricading himself between easy charm and skin-deep connections. his own journey clawing to the surface was a solitary one too, lonely at times - but the difference between the two of them standing here in his office is that hawk refuses to let himself feel it. it would be much easier to tell tim he doesn't know what he's talking about, to give him a generic note of sympathy that he's struggling in matters both personal and professional, give him the snacks and send him off into that same cold and unforgiving world.
but he's not his father. he's not going to do that.]
That's not what I was implying. I needed you to know that I had no idea it was you the whole time - no reason to suspect. None of this was on purpose.
Do you get that?
[even knowing what he does now - it didn't make his mind wander or fall to the worst case scenarios. he doesn't think tim is whoring himself out, doesn't think he's running with disreputable crowds or letting himself fall down some immoral drain.]
I am sorry I made you feel that way. It wasn't the intention. And even if you can't reconcile both of those people - I can. That's why I said nothing has to change. Nothing is changed in the way I think of you.
[but then again, hawk's best skill is his ability to bifurcate the things he doesn't want to know, doesn't want to feel, and keep moving. it's why he refuses to let himself linger on the why you don't want to part, as if he hasn't already spent a few nights with his hand down his pants thinking about all the what ifs - what if he had thrown caution to the wind, what if he'd taken tim to some motel and decided to keep his boy all semester? he shakes his head slightly, partly to clear his head and mainly to refute tim's declarations yet again, leaning in without realizing.]
Eyes on me.
[another order, but this is the most important part.]
You have nothing to be ashamed of. You're doing the best you can. Surviving, the only way you know how. Nothing disappointing about a boy who wants more for himself and strives to make it happen. Quite frankly, there's nothing I respect more.
[hawk reaches up, fingers hesitating for the barest moment - wanting to swipe at the hint of a glistening tear track left behind along tim's nose. instead he reaches into his breast pocket, pulling out a kerchief with a navy HF monogrammed in the corner. his voice lowers, into that rich, graveled timbre of sincerity.]
of course he didn't. just like tim had no idea the man behind the screen was hawkins fuller, professor at georgetown. he knows he should accept it for the honest confession it is, and yet tim still can't help but wonder if it had been a different, pretty-faced student - would fuller have slept with him? would they have spent the day in a fierce battle of wills? a man and his boy?
tim thinks it might have been easier to deal with all of this if they had. a fuck and go, where the hotel room door shuts behind them and closes all of this up into one dingy, dark place.
but that's not what they did, and instead tim stands in the middle of hawk's office feeling a little foolish, a little angry, a little hurt. mostly at himself, really, than anything else. that he let himself crack like this under the pressure when he's done so well for the past few years. no one would know that timothy david laughlin, work-a-holic, eager beaver, model student - was struggling. ]
I get it, yeah.
[ but professor fuller closes the distance between them again, just outside the edge of propriety and tim finds he's holding his breath against the intensity of the older man. he's half expecting a raised voice, unearned sternness, or a critique. but there's another command and it is like he was all but born to do everything this man tells him as his eyes track up almost immediately, a little surprised, no doubt that it shows in the faint flush creeping up his neck, to his jaw.
tim wants to close his eyes the moment he sees the man's hand move, imagine the touch he'd felt on his cheek that day in the cold morning air. it's stupid, how much he craves even the smallest hint of affection, and stranger so that he desires it from this man of all people.
instead, he's offered a kerchief, and at first tim doesn't quite know what to do or think of it, stunned instead by the man's words. he glances at the kerchief, but then like a boy realizing his mistake and being caught, his eyes snap back up to hawk and he swallows hard. he's quiet at first - uncomfortable and unsure at first if he truly wants to answer, to reveal one more card in his hand. and yet: ]
I trust you.
[ it's quiet, and the most calm he's sounded throughout this whole conversation. like that little crack he'd discovered in his chest has healed, and the warmth pouring from it feels less like endless despair and fury and more like hope. he reaches for the kerchief, the fabric rich and soft beneath his finger tips and though he knows he should turn away and clear the tear streaks from his face, he can't.
instead, he keeps his eyes on hawk, as he'd been so gently told to do as he removes his glasses and wipes sheepishly at his eyes, the bridge of his nose. only when he's sure the tears have been swept away does he put his glasses back on, then delicately fold the kerchief, and his eyes raise once again to meet the striking blue of fuller's.
(he will think a great deal about how the skin of his cheek bone will smell like the man's cologne - or the way the bridge of his nose will be blushed red from the press of the soft fabric, and the faint scratch of the stitching in that delicate HF. embarrassing). ]
I never stopped trusting you. I'd do whatever you told me to do. [ he offers the kerchief back between them, then, and gives a faint, sheepish smile.
something has changed between them even here, but tim's shoulders feel lighter, his chest more open, his heart slowing. he feels more embarrassed for his outburst now than furiously desperate, but to have said all of it out loud to someone who he knows will keep it as private and safe as it was meant to be in the first place is strangely freeing. no one else here knows his story. and no one ever will. he sighs a little, pinching his lips to one side, his nose wrinkling up, almost admitting to the awkwardness of it all now that they've waded through it. ]
Sorry. [ he says finally, shrugging one shoulder and tearing his eyes away, anywhere but the blue of those eyes. ] I didn't mean to unload on you - that wasn't fair. I really didn't. Break was just really lonely here, and then I guess everything else caught up to me.
[ he looks down now at the snacks from before, the smorgasbord of things he'd offered for him to take to eat on the way to lonigan's class. the clock on the wall in hawk's office tells him that he won't make it - five minutes to run across the other side of the campus isn't worth it, anyway. he shouldn't take the snacks since he's not going to class, and yet he can't help the way he knows how empty his stomach will feel later. and so he reaches for at least the package of energy bites - whatever the hell those are.
he worries the edge of the wrapper between his fingers for a moment before he looks back up at hawk, earnest and sincere, his shoulders shrugging in a way that matches the delicate crinkle of his nose. ]
But, um. Thank you. For not judging me - not unfairly, anyway. And listening. I can... I should get out of your hair.
[the answer is no, he wouldn't. that's a line no face could make him cross, a risk that can't be taken back once it's been completed. the part tim doesn't understand (and hopefully never will), is that this...relationship that was developed without his face? is the longest thing he's had going since he was in high school. and he absolutely shouldn't know that tim is the living embodiment of his physical preferences - sweet-faced, dark hair, big brown eyes, and a body he'd have no qualms committing many, many sins with, regardless of his earnest catholicism. and that's the part that he won't let himself think more about either: that at this point, it's not just tim's body and the raunchy shit he gets up to outside of class for a few bucks to feed himself and stay enrolled here. hawkins fuller noticed him because of his mind, his headstrong nature in between the easy teases and obedience, the desire to do something good both behind and in front of a camera in the world.
his pulse has quickened, inexplicably, while tim's answer hangs in the balance and he's confronted up close by dark lashes against pretty pale skin. god, what he wouldn't give to touch him again, to give himself a reminder of just how soft and supple it was beneath his fingertips even when it was ravaged by the unforgiving cold. somehow it kicks up another notch as he watches tim wordlessly obey every single command, drinking in those three little words: i trust you. he nods, silently, and feels the tension in the room pop as if stabbed by a needle, slowly hissing into something more manageably comfortable. they're going to be alright.]
Good.
[he watches as tim wipes away his tears, putting as much approval as he can muster into the expression along with the softest of smiles - only if someone knows what to look for on the contours of his face, the slight differences in his mouth.
(there is a resolution that he will absolutely not run those words through his head later tonight: i'd do whatever you told me to. surely he knows the implication...?)]
You're alright.
[he looks down at the handkerchief, considering for a few moments before pressing his hand gently over tim's and pushing it back towards him. if his thumb brushes against the back of tim's fist clutched around the woven fabric, there's enough plausible deniability to pretend it's accidental. or just a force of habit.]
Keep it. Just in case things get caught up again.
[but he has a sneaking suspicion they won't - that he's managed to salvage this enough for them both, and he tries to suppress the small swooping sensation in his stomach. a few small steps back, and hawk sits back down with a creak of leather into his high-backed desk chair, fingers tapping idly against the armrests as he watches tim shake off some of the awkwardness and considering the mismatched feast in front of him. hawk follows his gaze to the clock with a mutter of ah, shit, before shaking his head.]
Starts in five, doesn't it? Listen - I'll put in a word with Lonigan. Tell him I kept you late to discuss your thesis. Which we should set a meeting for, by the way.
[it feels almost like business as usual, and he offers one last amused smile in response to to the way tim's nose scrunches.]
You don't have to thank me for doing the decent thing. And - just remember, my door is always open.
[the implication is that it's for anything - not just schoolwork. but vocalizing the idea that tim might still have those bouts of loneliness or struggling would just be rubbing it in at this point, so he's not going to press it any further. they've crossed a bridge today, and that was the best he could hope for. his gaze slips back down to the paper that's been left behind, and then the obnoxious orange from a bag of chips on his desk draws him back before he slides it across the surface towards tim's end.]
Hey - do me a favor and take some more of this with you. Seriously, it'll never get eaten otherwise.
[that, and he knows the boy probably needs it a hell of a lot more than he does.]
[ the bad thing about all of this is that up close, tim is able to see all of the things he imagined the man on the other side of that camera screen would be. firm, tough, domineering when he had to be - and yet there's something in the sharpness of his eyes that belies just how clever he is, how hard he works to build and create and weave his words, laying out everything perfectly and carefully.
this close, he can also see the faintest quirk of his lips, and it only serves to make tim's smile broaden just a little more, make a little more life come back into his eyes, like a flower offered water and sunlight for the first time after days of darkness. maybe he is icarus, tired and scalded by a sun he tried to reach. the sun warned him off, but it's the little kerchief that has his wings fluttering still in flight.
tim curls his hand around the fabric, but it's the press of hawk's broad, warm hand that startles him. it makes the little hairs on the back of his neck prickle, and his eyes flit up again to watch the man as he rounds back toward his desk.
the moment is broken between them, the distance made and the armistice met. it doesn't change that the flush that had crept up his neck before now easily works its ways to his cheeks - faint and pink, drawing out the little, faded freckles sunkissed into his cheeks from a warmer than usual fall on campus. (it feels like the back of his hand is on fire itself - the wax of his wings dripping, dripping, dripping and scalding him). ]
Thank you.
[ he huffs a little, shaking his head as he carefully raises the flap of his satchel and slides the kerchief in alongside the energy bites. ]
If you don't mind? I know it's not honest, but - I don't think I could focus if I went now, anyway. [ and for once, tim will concede this to the other man - a lie to another faculty member, to protect him. he doesn't accept favors easily, and accepting this one is just an attempt to show his gratitude - to give space where he'd not allowed before. ]
I'll stop by your office hours tomorrow. For the thesis. I actually think I want to include a segment on the degradation of bipartisanship and how our inability to find neutral territory in the Senate and the House is undermining our democratic success, especially since we struggle with two-party politics when the race really is wide open.
[ the words come out with ease, and it's obvious for a moment that the gears are already turning again like they should be - the cogs greased and whirling - tim laughlin brought back to life. his brow furrows, a hand comes up so that his finger can tap idly against his bottom lip all the while he looks up in thought. ]
But I think there's more to unpack there - it's too broad. But it's all so complex it might be just as easy to get lost in the weeds, too. Oh -
[ another peace offering - the bag of chips. tim takes it with little rebuttal, and even opens it as he wanders a step backward, still thinking to himself as he pops a chip into his mouth. (it's also silly how he blinks in surprise and hums at the sharp, cheddar flavor). ]
You're missing out, you know. Maybe we give these out to Congress and all our problems will be solved. Then what would I write about?
[ he heads for the door, eating another chip, but he turns at the last moment, peering over his shoulder at hawk. ]
Thanks again. Honest.
[ a sheepish duck of his chin and he's turning, headed out and into the quad's open air. ]
no subject
returning to the dorms felt like nothing short of a prison - the halls eerily quiet, the lights off, not even a student greeter at the door. just the beep of his badged key and the squeak of the glass door shutting behind him. only a few students remained during the holiday, and most that had didn't even live in his building. so tim perched in his room, coming out only for his sparingly few meals per day, and tried his best to busy himself with reading.
even jumping on cam hadn't been on his mind, though he did it in an attempt to make up some more money to pay for his books, his meal card next semester. he'd even made a call home to wish them a merry christmas - his mother had been happy to hear from him, but his father refused to come onto the phone, as usual. there would be no help from staten island.
and so christmas dinner for tim laughlin had been a cup of ramen, a stained copy of locke's second treatise of government for his thesis, and a glass of water. he heralds in the new year much the same way. it's lonely. and maybe it was lonely before and he'd simply had the tools with which to ignore it - the fantasy. the idealistic, stupid dreams of a boy who can barely survive college, let alone the real world.
he reads the same passage of locke twenty times before he finally throws it across the room.
the isolation of break has settled into his bones, however, and even the bustle of the start of the semester does little to shake it off. arthur ribs him for being boring, mary voices quiet concern but doesn't bother to ask any real questions, and a few members of faculty give him looks. even professor fuller doesn't press him like he used to, and he does his best to keep his head down and take diligent notes for later. he answers when called on, turns assignments in on time, fills the air when his professors look for answers from a dead-eyed class, but otherwise, tim laughlin keeps to himself.
it's no different today, either. professor fuller's class is interesting, engaging, and maybe at some point in the past he'd have piped up to question his flow chart on political and manufacturing consent, but he simply doodles the notes down in his notebook, brow furrowed as he marks questions for himself in the margins. the very same questions he'd have allowed space for in the discussion. instead, he'll spend time in the library later.
he's just gotten his bag packed and started for the door when he hears his name. he pauses for a moment, turning to look at professor fuller, and he cannot help the strange tightness that rises up into his chest. it makes it a little hard to breathe, really, and he has no doubt the apprehension shows on his face.
a few students pass him, glancing back curiously of course. timothy laughlin is never asked to stay after class - not in this way. his hands flex around the strap of his bag and he lets out a little breath before approaching the man who stands, gesturing at the door. ]
I have another class in an hour, and I need to try to head back to the dorm for lunch.
[ a quiet, but polite warning. a note that he cannot stay long, whatever this is. he's out of meals for the week, having been unable to quite cover the cost of the extended meal plan on top of his text books. so ramen or a peanut butter sandwich it is for lunch. it beats nothing.
he falls into line beside professor fuller, though makes certain there is a measured distance between them still. ]
I turned my outline in late, I apologize. It got away from me - had a lot of reading frontloaded in this semester that I tried to get done. I understand if you can't accept it past the deadline.
no subject
[of course tim doesn't look thrilled to have been summoned, and he supposes it's doubled by the fact that hawk is the one to have initiated it and that others seem curious about the abnormal circumstances. but hawk ignores them, waiting to fall into place behind tim and lock up the classroom once its emptied out. unfortunately for tim, the comments about lunch back at the dorm fly over his head in the sense that he assumes tim plans to simply eat food at the dorm while attempting to catch up, not that the food in his dorm room is all he has left. if he did, it would have him wonder uncomfortably just how hard up he is for cash - and what that means he's willing to do to get more of it. especially now that he's not getting an extra five-hundred bucks a week from hawk.
an uncomfortable silence envelops them on the walk to his office, even though he prefers to bring everything up with the added privacy of a closed door and no one likely to interrupt unless craig happens to saunter down the hallway and off to the right from the sociology wing. hawk's got a whole corner to himself at the opposite end, and it's not the first time tim has been here by any means, but he can guess with confidence it'll definitely be the most awkward. he holds open the door for his student, waving a hand to usher him inside before closing it behind them and heading towards the solid mahogany desk in front of a wall of books and dc trinkets, gifts from dean smith and accolades from his own time at the university.
he presses his hands together, elbows on the desk and leans forward to listen to tim's apology.]
It's alright. I'm not worried about the outline, and I'll accept it, on one condition.
[his eyes try to seek out what this might be, if he'd gone and fucked it all up with his mistake. is this all his fault?]
You haven't been yourself in class lately. Quiet. Keeping to yourself.
You were - mentioned at our recent department faculty meeting, actually. Everyone's under the impression you've been out of character.
[his lips purse slightly, fingers flexing against each other.]
I imagine I'm the last person you want to hear this from, but are you alright?
[his hands part, palms going flat against the shiny, lacquered surface as he leans in and drops his voice.]
Is this - because of what happened over break?
[what happened between us? is the unspoken implication.]
Talk to me.
no subject
he gives a sheepish nod to some of his other professors in the political science wing as he follows hawk to that corner office he knows well. he's stopped in here many times between classes - most of the time to ask questions about a point in class, or to have him look at a paper before turning it in. other times, simply because he's enjoyed talking to him - needing company in the bustle of the busy day and using a current political event as fodder for that.
but he looks at the door in dread today, stepping inside once he's ushered in and settles in the chair across from the man's desk. he gathers his bag into his lap so as not to remove it from round his torso, but also to have something to hold onto. ]
A condition?
[ he tilts his head, brow furrowing faintly in genuine curiousity. it fades as professor fuller continues to speak and he swallows hard, fingers curling against the worn, near dilapidated faux leather of his satchel. ]
Oh. I'm fine, really.
[ the faculty meet, tim knows that, but how he came to be the topic of one of their department meetings, he doesn't know. he shifts uncomfortably in the chair, wishing suddenly that his answer would be enough, that he could be released so he could get out into the quad and catch his breath. it's so hard to breathe lately. ]
It's not - nothing happened over break. [ good boy, he can almost hear, as though the faceless man might praise him for sticking well to the narrative they built on the snowy sidewalks near the coffee shop. this conversation didn't happen. he lets out a little breath and glances down at his hands, fidgeting before he glances back up, watching as hawk leans in over the fine wood of his desk.
this office once felt a safe haven - shelves of books, old awards hanging on the wall, photographs from older days at georgetown - a place where he has sat cross-legged in this very chair and argued vehemently some point that professor fuller entertained simply out of kindness. he can see that now, zoomed out on everything - how the man puts up with him. how so many people and faculty smile and nod and let him talk himself in circles.
was he always wasting his breath? ]
The break was just a little long, that's all. Difficult, I guess. Sleep schedule is a little messed up, and I got behind on my research. [ he shrugs one shoulder, glancing up at the man and giving a half, small smile. ]
I'm just really trying to focus, take good notes, make sure I take everything in. I... I have a habit of interrupting classes when I shouldn't. I'm not the one with the degree, after all. It may give others the opportunity to... to participate more. That's all.
[ he wants to bolt. never has he felt nervous energy like this in his life, and yet right here, across from hawkins fuller, he feels as though the chair itself is made of lighting. like all that energy is dumping somewhere and it has nowhere to go but into the bends of his ankles, his knees. ]
Really, I'm fine. I'll... I'll make a better effort to speak up in class. Please apologize to them for me. I wasn't trying to be rude. I - ...really should be going.
no subject
i'm fine was the answer he'd been dreading, but predicted in some way. brushing it off, pretending all was well. and he supposes there's no one to blame but himself - considering he did insist they both pretend that nothing at all happened over break. and tim follows suit, enough that it prompts that good boy in his own mind, too, and hawk glances away for a brief moment to wet his lips and will away the inappropriate intrusion.]
You've got a heavy course load this semester, I get it. I'm not trying to add to that.
[he tilts his head slightly, trying to get tim to meet his gaze and see the honest to god compassion in his gaze. it's not any different than he ever was in this context before, because hawkins fuller had always been a teacher first, and frankly a damn good one. one who cares about his students, who would have noticed this change in tim without the faculty meeting or if that disastrous meetup have never happened at all. it's not like he stopped caring from then until now - it's just...complicated. but he has no idea his words have turned tim upside down, the cause for his heartache and retreating back into a shell he didn't know existed.]
If your last essay was anything to go by, you've been taking excellent notes. But try and give yourself a break - get some rest this weekend if you can. Work yourself to the bone and you'll burn out.
[god, everything seems like it's a step too far now, doesn't it? his eyes widen for a moment, hoping tim knows he means work as in simply school work. so he barrels ahead.]
And by the way, you're never interrupting. Those interruptions happen to be the highlight of most of my classes. You got almost half the students involved that day you brought up McCarthyism two months ago, remember that? Last few weeks and I haven't heard a peep from you, even when I brought up Vietnam. Feels a little like I've been left hanging.
[it feels like he's going in a circle again - like tim is reading something between the lines that isn't there. it makes hawk's shoulders sag a little in disappointment, leaning back in his chair and watching tim's desperation to leave.]
Look - none of this is a criticism. We're just concerned about a student that's made a lasting impression on his professors, is all.
Like I said, try and get some rest.
no subject
fuller mentions his paper and his eyes pop up at that, his brow dipping again, his lips pulling. ]
The topic was boring. I copied my notes nearly verbatim and it got me an A.
[ and the first tasks of a semester usually are simpler - a warmup for students coming back after a long stretch away. but the lack of challenge had been infuriating when he's already got so little to bump up against. his course load is no different this semester than last - he can handle the work, the stress, the pressure. but he can't handle everything else. ]
And I'm sorry if you felt I've left you hanging. I wasn't aware I had that sort of responsibility. None of the other students are expected to participate the way that I have - I just...
[ he shakes his head, taking in a slow, deep breath and trying to center himself again. professional. calm. polite. metered and measured and carefully doled out. ]
And Vietnam itself is too broad a topic to engage on in a fifty minute lecture. Why would I waste valuable time broaching that topic when I'd be the only one in the room speaking?
[ professional. calm. polite. he repeats it like a mantra as he takes another breath but something gets away from him when professor fuller insists again on getting rest. what is rest, when one's whole world depends on fundraising to make it to the next semester? every moment is a race, a dash to the finish just to try and make it, when so many of the students around him come from old money and the who-knows-who of academia. ]
And I'll admit I'm frankly surprised you didn't fail this paper as well. I made a point to be as neutral as I could be. No real creative thinking, no out of the box theorizing. Nothing that could be called naive or idealistic - Vietnam would be a bad topic. Too polarizing, especially now that we have technology to look back on our strategies and weaponization.
[ he shrugs again, shifting to the edge of his seat, his knee bouncing absently. he opens up his satchel and draws out his notebook from class, rifling through it until he peels out the essay he'd been handed back today. if hawk peeks, he can see tim's questions blotted in the margins - vietnam circled with bullet points underneath - the old tim written out in ink instead of spoken out loud.
he reaches to set the paper on professor fuller's desk. ]
Your syllabus for this was too vague. If you truly wanted my opinion, I'd have failed this assignment as well. I don't speak up in class because I don't see a need to - it isn't personal, professor. I want to talk about the world I want to see, and maybe that's not realistic. Maybe that's childish, but if this is what you want, then you should keep this.
[ he closes his notebook, his satchel, and rises. ]
I have to go. The shuttle doesn't come to my dorm after lunch, and I have to get back there and up the hill again. I can't be late.
no subject
that doesn't mean he's going soft on his teaching, or that he's going to cut tim more of a break than anyone else - even if he wants to. hawk leans forward again when tim stands, chin tipping up to draw his attention and silently indicate not to leave - not yet.]
You know how much easier my job would be if every student participated like you? Class would be a hell of a lot more engaged.
[he offers a brief, but wry smile, a twinkle in the washed blue sparkling in his eye.]
Look, it's not about Vietnam. And you don't have any responsibility or obligation to me, god no - nor am I looking for you to change any of your opinions overnight. I may have...commented on your leanings in the past, but it's only because the reality of Washington is a whole other beast I have no doubt you'll be in the mouth of someday. I'm not doing you the disservice of letting you walk in like a lamb.
[which is what he feels like he's doing, in essence, by cutting him off from an extra $500 a week he probably desperately needs. hawk rubs at his jaw absently again, watching as tim stuffs his things back into his bag and disperses some of his jittery nerves, clearly ready to leave, even if hawk isn't ready to let him go. he leaves tim's paper on the desk, already knowing he's going to go through it again with a fine-tooth comb and wonder if he was too soft and just trying not to rock the boat. and if he did, then that means he's failed on some level and he won't fucking do that again.
hawk finally stands too, taking a step towards the door to try and block him off from leaving without some kind of resolution.]
Going up the Hill and back is a pretty long way for lunch. I've got some snacks here if it'll save you the trip.
[hawk has never felt the need to explain himself to anyone, to fill awkward silences instead of letting someone else stew in them to a point, but he's stalling in a way, trying to dig deeper into the root of the issue here. the thought of letting tim walk out that door without any resolution makes him feel a steadily growing knot in his chest. he jabs a thumb back towards the door in the direction of the main lobby, where helpful maps and pamphlets and student guides and the administration staff sit.]
Got a new secretary at the front desk this year, and I think she's trying to fatten me up with all this stuff.
no subject
[ he can't help the way he's getting fired up over it, the way his shoulders hitch up, the way his hands loosen on his bag to gesture. he even backs up a half step when hawk blocks the door, and something about the closeness, the way the man cages him into his office loosens something in him. there's a fire in tim laughlin that he cannot control - a passion he has no gauge for. there's no spigot to turn it on and turn it off, and with it comes great advantages and even greater consequences. ]
I know that I world I want to see will never come to fruition. Honestly, it's better that it doesn't. Extremes on either end are bound to fail - strict dichotomies are already the heart of what's fracturing American politics. But if I go into all of this knowing that it's dark and terrible, and that I have to transmogrify the way I think to fit that mold the moment I fall into the orbit of someone with power, influence - then why am I even trying? I appreciate your concern and your watchful eye, Professor Fuller, and I am sorry that I have not engaged in your classes more this month.
[ he lets out a little breath, shakes his head, and looks back up at the man. there's a fire in tim's eyes, whether he realizes it or not. ]
I want to believe that there's good in people. Even if they don't believe that there's any good in me. Or if that good has a valuation, an expectation attached to it. Do you think that any of those faculty members would ask about me, care about me, if they knew?
[ the word knew sits heavy on the air between them, and color rises up into the high points of his cheeks. ]
I went to the chapel that day and prayed. For a solution, for something different, for anything to change. I have prayed my whole life for a path forward that's clearer, not easier. Forgive me, then, if I have been quiet. I'm doing everything I can to figure out where the ground falls beneath my feet. I've lost your respect, and no matter what either of us wanted then - I never wanted that.
[ it's almost childish to say it out loud - to look professor fuller in the eye and admit to the way he's all but idolized him in his time here. the way he has soaked up the attention and the care, the intellectual battles, the conversations had in this very same doorway.
he swallows hard and looks away then, to the old watch on his wrist. the glass face is dull and worn, the band soft, the clasp tarnished. everything about tim laughlin is well-loved items, handmedowns handled with care, and the careful curation of necessities. ]
My class is in half an hour. It's Dr. Lonigan's class - I can't be late or he won't let me in.
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and it's why listening to tim even now brings him a glimpse of that raw potential once more, reminds him it's still in there and hasn't been destroyed. well thank christ, because hawk isn't sure he'd be able to live with that fuck up. so he leans back slightly, something like pride blooming in his chest and in the small quirk of his lips upward as he listens to tim practically preaching about democracy and the failed state of a two-party political system.]
I'm not looking for an apology. No one is. But that -
[he points towards tim's chest, towards the way his entire body has been energized with this new fire, the whole of what's been missing for the past few weeks.]
- that's who we've been missing in our classes.
[because the faculty loves him, really. which makes the air feel like it's been sucked out of the room when tim poignantly asks if his goodness and perspective and worth is somehow attached to a purity contest and a question of morality. it makes his face fall, jaw flexing and lips pressing together in a firm line as his brows furrow. the sigh that comes out of him is deep-seated and already seemingly exhausted by what he has to say. of course he knows what tim is getting at. and the reality is: yes. there are assholes in this building probably sitting some forty feet from them who would judge tim laughlin for selling his body on the internet to make ends meet. and hawk doesn't think he needs to hear that from him - or that he's really looking for the answer. but there's one thing he can't abide by, so he stands to his full height and lowers his voice with the kind of conviction that's rare even in his classes, instead preferring to play the neutral and encouraging guide or the sardonic cynic, bringing everyone down to reality.]
There is good in people if you know where to look. Far and few between, and believe me when I say - you're one of the few. And the kind of good you're talking about, that I and other members of this faculty see in you?
That's priceless. Don't you forget it.
[his gaze flickers down to the flush on tim's cheekbones, the way it singes up towards his ears and reminds him immediately and inconveniently of the fact that his whole body does the same under certain circumstances. it makes him think about that day outside the coffee shop again, tim shivering and looking utterly crushed. the kid is struggling with more than just his schoolwork, all these invisible expectations from a god that hawk doesn't believe exist, from the judgment and scorn he thinks he'd earn from his peers and his mentors. it's an overstep to give him the atheist playbook right now, but hawk looks up sharply when tim asks for forgiveness. what forgiveness does he need?
and why does he think hawk has lost respect for him?]
Hey, time out. You'll make it to Lonigan's just fine, but back up a minute.
[a step towards tim, and then another - one closer than he should. but he needs to meet his eyes, to make him understand. his voice is firm and insistent, with the kind of patience he's granted tim as he works through the more complex structures and concepts in their office hours before this whole mess started.]
Look at me.
[and he doesn't continue until tim complies, honeyed brown through those thick lenses so expressive and chin quivering ever so slightly from his ardent declarations moments before.]
You haven't lost my respect.
There's nothing you could do there that would ever make that happen. I don't know what God or Lonigan or anyone else thinks, but that's what you're hearing from me. Nothing has changed between us, do you understand?
Things won't be this difficult forever. That's hard to hear without the evidence - but it will change. Especially for someone like you who is constantly pushing himself to fly.
[icarus with the scalded wings.
the sudden flash of gold catches his attention, and hawk walks back to his desk to pull out some granola bars, chocolates, and some organic energy bites - whatever the fuck those are.]
These aren't winning any awards for the most balanced meal, but here. So you won't be late. I know Lonigan's a hardass about that.
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he feels inexplicably tired, suddenly, even though the fight that he'd thought had run out of him is simply waiting, buzzing and jittering in his chest, making his heart pound heavy still. he opens his mouth to rebut something about goodness, something about a special something that tim supposedly has, but he closes it again. he doesn't believe whatever notion of goodness that is - no one with that kind of goodness turns his back on his family, tries to reconcile god with his life, does the kind of work that he does - but he could spend hours over that.
instead, he's drawn back out to professor fuller approaching, getting closer and closer, until he's all but forced to look up at him. it's a reflex, anyway, to obey him in this way. a command, even with the teacherly patience he's heard semester after semester. he blinks up at him, meeting his gaze, feeling strangely small now with the breadth and height of the man so close to him.
but he stares, silently up at him, shaken to the core by his words - you haven't lost my respect. ]
The way you spoke. Ah - before. [ at the park, in the cold, before christmas... ] Made it sound like you questioned... my free time. Like I was doing more than what you'd already expected to see from me. Worse, maybe.
[ especially when i don't know what they're up to outside of class.
tim shifts his weight, instinctively leaning onto one foot that creates a hint of space between them. but he can feel the heat of professor fuller from here, even smell the rich notes of his undoubtedly expensive aftershave, and he looks away from him then, down at his hands again, then back up because he knows he will be expected to speak to him face to face.
but professor fuller whisks away to this desk, drawing up snacks from somewhere, and tim at first stares for a moment at the pile of things on the lacquered top, then back up to him. tim takes a step toward the desk, closer to hawk. ]
I'm not that. I do what I have to do, and that day - before - was the only time. I know that what I have to do isn't right. That I should have just taken the scholarship I was given for SUNY and been satisfied with that - but I had to try. I want to be here, Professor Fuller. I want to do something good with all of this and I'm trying.
[ his jaw quivers, his throat swells with a hint of emotion but tim tries to suck in a deep breath, to temper the burning, dangerous, desperate little thing trying to crawl its way out from between his ribs. what would there be around his heart if not a lion, desperately clawing its way to the surface, unwilling to back down even when defeat seems imminent. ]
But I keep hearing what you said - over and over. When I saw it was you, I was glad. I trust you, probably more than I trust myself. And I get all of it - why you can't, why you don't want to - it's nothing about that. But I don't know how to reconcile the Tim Laughlin you knew before and the one who is here in front of you.
[ he huffs something like a desperate little noise, finally takes a step back, his hands coming to his hips. ]
I don't run around in my free time. I don't do anything more than what you've already seen. I don't have friends, I don't have family here, I barely survive just trying to pay my tuition every semester and just hope I get it in time to get seats in the classes I know I'll need or to get the right meal plan, or get the right books on time. I have nothing - but this school and these classes.
[ he runs a hand back through his hair, letting out a shaken breath and then furiously wipes at the corner of one eye beneath the dark rims of this glasses. how embarrassing. ]
I'm tired of pushing myself to fly when it never leads me anywhere good. I respect you a great deal, Professor Fuller. I... I want to do right by your classes and learn as much as I can from you while I'm still able to be here, but I'm just going to disappoint you. Because I am that same student, but I'm also the guy in the dark room with a camera who you can't trust.
[ his hands finally fall back to their sides.
there's no point in making lonigan's class. he won't be able to listen, to focus. he'll just have to be diligent in the future - not miss another so as not to drop his grade. ]
It's just the first time I've ever felt ashamed of it. For just trying to make it.
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oh. of course.
of course timothy laughlin would worry that hawk thought him to be dishonest in some way, that he was disgusted by the idea of his outside activities. it's been a clear misunderstanding, and hawk shakes his head adamantly even as tim's voice escalates and wavers slightly between these raw, heartfelt confessions. if he felt like the air was sucked out of the room before, now it's downright suffocating. these emotions - aren't what he has ever signed up for. not to say that he hasn't offered a box of tissues to a student going through a mental breakdown, or having unexpectedly lost a family member, but this? this is a whole different ballgame, an intimacy created between them that frankly neither signed up for. something he's never navigated, and hopefully never fucking will long after tim graduates.
but for now, he's not going to let the boy just walk around thinking he's dirty because of it.]
Tim.
[he looks up from his desk, pushing the drawer shut before walking back towards him and slotting in close once more. it's almost too easy the way it feels right to be here, just shy of inappropriate. but they're long since past that now, aren't they? hawk tips his head, glancing downward at where tim's eyes are glassy behind his thick lenses.
it'd be a lie to say he didn't see something of himself in there, from once upon a time. a boy who liked pretty things, sensitive friends, grew too attached to them both and lost all of it, along with his father's respect and whatever foolishly optimistic future he thought he might have back then. instead he'd locked it all away and thrown away the key, barricading himself between easy charm and skin-deep connections. his own journey clawing to the surface was a solitary one too, lonely at times - but the difference between the two of them standing here in his office is that hawk refuses to let himself feel it. it would be much easier to tell tim he doesn't know what he's talking about, to give him a generic note of sympathy that he's struggling in matters both personal and professional, give him the snacks and send him off into that same cold and unforgiving world.
but he's not his father. he's not going to do that.]
That's not what I was implying. I needed you to know that I had no idea it was you the whole time - no reason to suspect. None of this was on purpose.
Do you get that?
[even knowing what he does now - it didn't make his mind wander or fall to the worst case scenarios. he doesn't think tim is whoring himself out, doesn't think he's running with disreputable crowds or letting himself fall down some immoral drain.]
I am sorry I made you feel that way. It wasn't the intention. And even if you can't reconcile both of those people - I can. That's why I said nothing has to change. Nothing is changed in the way I think of you.
[but then again, hawk's best skill is his ability to bifurcate the things he doesn't want to know, doesn't want to feel, and keep moving. it's why he refuses to let himself linger on the why you don't want to part, as if he hasn't already spent a few nights with his hand down his pants thinking about all the what ifs - what if he had thrown caution to the wind, what if he'd taken tim to some motel and decided to keep his boy all semester? he shakes his head slightly, partly to clear his head and mainly to refute tim's declarations yet again, leaning in without realizing.]
Eyes on me.
[another order, but this is the most important part.]
You have nothing to be ashamed of. You're doing the best you can. Surviving, the only way you know how. Nothing disappointing about a boy who wants more for himself and strives to make it happen. Quite frankly, there's nothing I respect more.
[hawk reaches up, fingers hesitating for the barest moment - wanting to swipe at the hint of a glistening tear track left behind along tim's nose. instead he reaches into his breast pocket, pulling out a kerchief with a navy HF monogrammed in the corner. his voice lowers, into that rich, graveled timbre of sincerity.]
I trust you - [skippy.]
Do you still trust me?
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of course he didn't. just like tim had no idea the man behind the screen was hawkins fuller, professor at georgetown. he knows he should accept it for the honest confession it is, and yet tim still can't help but wonder if it had been a different, pretty-faced student - would fuller have slept with him? would they have spent the day in a fierce battle of wills? a man and his boy?
tim thinks it might have been easier to deal with all of this if they had. a fuck and go, where the hotel room door shuts behind them and closes all of this up into one dingy, dark place.
but that's not what they did, and instead tim stands in the middle of hawk's office feeling a little foolish, a little angry, a little hurt. mostly at himself, really, than anything else. that he let himself crack like this under the pressure when he's done so well for the past few years. no one would know that timothy david laughlin, work-a-holic, eager beaver, model student - was struggling. ]
I get it, yeah.
[ but professor fuller closes the distance between them again, just outside the edge of propriety and tim finds he's holding his breath against the intensity of the older man. he's half expecting a raised voice, unearned sternness, or a critique. but there's another command and it is like he was all but born to do everything this man tells him as his eyes track up almost immediately, a little surprised, no doubt that it shows in the faint flush creeping up his neck, to his jaw.
tim wants to close his eyes the moment he sees the man's hand move, imagine the touch he'd felt on his cheek that day in the cold morning air. it's stupid, how much he craves even the smallest hint of affection, and stranger so that he desires it from this man of all people.
instead, he's offered a kerchief, and at first tim doesn't quite know what to do or think of it, stunned instead by the man's words. he glances at the kerchief, but then like a boy realizing his mistake and being caught, his eyes snap back up to hawk and he swallows hard. he's quiet at first - uncomfortable and unsure at first if he truly wants to answer, to reveal one more card in his hand. and yet: ]
I trust you.
[ it's quiet, and the most calm he's sounded throughout this whole conversation. like that little crack he'd discovered in his chest has healed, and the warmth pouring from it feels less like endless despair and fury and more like hope. he reaches for the kerchief, the fabric rich and soft beneath his finger tips and though he knows he should turn away and clear the tear streaks from his face, he can't.
instead, he keeps his eyes on hawk, as he'd been so gently told to do as he removes his glasses and wipes sheepishly at his eyes, the bridge of his nose. only when he's sure the tears have been swept away does he put his glasses back on, then delicately fold the kerchief, and his eyes raise once again to meet the striking blue of fuller's.
(he will think a great deal about how the skin of his cheek bone will smell like the man's cologne - or the way the bridge of his nose will be blushed red from the press of the soft fabric, and the faint scratch of the stitching in that delicate HF. embarrassing). ]
I never stopped trusting you. I'd do whatever you told me to do. [ he offers the kerchief back between them, then, and gives a faint, sheepish smile.
something has changed between them even here, but tim's shoulders feel lighter, his chest more open, his heart slowing. he feels more embarrassed for his outburst now than furiously desperate, but to have said all of it out loud to someone who he knows will keep it as private and safe as it was meant to be in the first place is strangely freeing. no one else here knows his story. and no one ever will. he sighs a little, pinching his lips to one side, his nose wrinkling up, almost admitting to the awkwardness of it all now that they've waded through it. ]
Sorry. [ he says finally, shrugging one shoulder and tearing his eyes away, anywhere but the blue of those eyes. ] I didn't mean to unload on you - that wasn't fair. I really didn't. Break was just really lonely here, and then I guess everything else caught up to me.
[ he looks down now at the snacks from before, the smorgasbord of things he'd offered for him to take to eat on the way to lonigan's class. the clock on the wall in hawk's office tells him that he won't make it - five minutes to run across the other side of the campus isn't worth it, anyway. he shouldn't take the snacks since he's not going to class, and yet he can't help the way he knows how empty his stomach will feel later. and so he reaches for at least the package of energy bites - whatever the hell those are.
he worries the edge of the wrapper between his fingers for a moment before he looks back up at hawk, earnest and sincere, his shoulders shrugging in a way that matches the delicate crinkle of his nose. ]
But, um. Thank you. For not judging me - not unfairly, anyway. And listening. I can... I should get out of your hair.
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his pulse has quickened, inexplicably, while tim's answer hangs in the balance and he's confronted up close by dark lashes against pretty pale skin. god, what he wouldn't give to touch him again, to give himself a reminder of just how soft and supple it was beneath his fingertips even when it was ravaged by the unforgiving cold. somehow it kicks up another notch as he watches tim wordlessly obey every single command, drinking in those three little words: i trust you. he nods, silently, and feels the tension in the room pop as if stabbed by a needle, slowly hissing into something more manageably comfortable. they're going to be alright.]
Good.
[he watches as tim wipes away his tears, putting as much approval as he can muster into the expression along with the softest of smiles - only if someone knows what to look for on the contours of his face, the slight differences in his mouth.
(there is a resolution that he will absolutely not run those words through his head later tonight: i'd do whatever you told me to. surely he knows the implication...?)]
You're alright.
[he looks down at the handkerchief, considering for a few moments before pressing his hand gently over tim's and pushing it back towards him. if his thumb brushes against the back of tim's fist clutched around the woven fabric, there's enough plausible deniability to pretend it's accidental. or just a force of habit.]
Keep it. Just in case things get caught up again.
[but he has a sneaking suspicion they won't - that he's managed to salvage this enough for them both, and he tries to suppress the small swooping sensation in his stomach. a few small steps back, and hawk sits back down with a creak of leather into his high-backed desk chair, fingers tapping idly against the armrests as he watches tim shake off some of the awkwardness and considering the mismatched feast in front of him. hawk follows his gaze to the clock with a mutter of ah, shit, before shaking his head.]
Starts in five, doesn't it? Listen - I'll put in a word with Lonigan. Tell him I kept you late to discuss your thesis. Which we should set a meeting for, by the way.
[it feels almost like business as usual, and he offers one last amused smile in response to to the way tim's nose scrunches.]
You don't have to thank me for doing the decent thing. And - just remember, my door is always open.
[the implication is that it's for anything - not just schoolwork. but vocalizing the idea that tim might still have those bouts of loneliness or struggling would just be rubbing it in at this point, so he's not going to press it any further. they've crossed a bridge today, and that was the best he could hope for. his gaze slips back down to the paper that's been left behind, and then the obnoxious orange from a bag of chips on his desk draws him back before he slides it across the surface towards tim's end.]
Hey - do me a favor and take some more of this with you. Seriously, it'll never get eaten otherwise.
[that, and he knows the boy probably needs it a hell of a lot more than he does.]
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this close, he can also see the faintest quirk of his lips, and it only serves to make tim's smile broaden just a little more, make a little more life come back into his eyes, like a flower offered water and sunlight for the first time after days of darkness. maybe he is icarus, tired and scalded by a sun he tried to reach. the sun warned him off, but it's the little kerchief that has his wings fluttering still in flight.
tim curls his hand around the fabric, but it's the press of hawk's broad, warm hand that startles him. it makes the little hairs on the back of his neck prickle, and his eyes flit up again to watch the man as he rounds back toward his desk.
the moment is broken between them, the distance made and the armistice met. it doesn't change that the flush that had crept up his neck before now easily works its ways to his cheeks - faint and pink, drawing out the little, faded freckles sunkissed into his cheeks from a warmer than usual fall on campus. (it feels like the back of his hand is on fire itself - the wax of his wings dripping, dripping, dripping and scalding him). ]
Thank you.
[ he huffs a little, shaking his head as he carefully raises the flap of his satchel and slides the kerchief in alongside the energy bites. ]
If you don't mind? I know it's not honest, but - I don't think I could focus if I went now, anyway. [ and for once, tim will concede this to the other man - a lie to another faculty member, to protect him. he doesn't accept favors easily, and accepting this one is just an attempt to show his gratitude - to give space where he'd not allowed before. ]
I'll stop by your office hours tomorrow. For the thesis. I actually think I want to include a segment on the degradation of bipartisanship and how our inability to find neutral territory in the Senate and the House is undermining our democratic success, especially since we struggle with two-party politics when the race really is wide open.
[ the words come out with ease, and it's obvious for a moment that the gears are already turning again like they should be - the cogs greased and whirling - tim laughlin brought back to life. his brow furrows, a hand comes up so that his finger can tap idly against his bottom lip all the while he looks up in thought. ]
But I think there's more to unpack there - it's too broad. But it's all so complex it might be just as easy to get lost in the weeds, too. Oh -
[ another peace offering - the bag of chips. tim takes it with little rebuttal, and even opens it as he wanders a step backward, still thinking to himself as he pops a chip into his mouth. (it's also silly how he blinks in surprise and hums at the sharp, cheddar flavor). ]
You're missing out, you know. Maybe we give these out to Congress and all our problems will be solved. Then what would I write about?
[ he heads for the door, eating another chip, but he turns at the last moment, peering over his shoulder at hawk. ]
Thanks again. Honest.
[ a sheepish duck of his chin and he's turning, headed out and into the quad's open air. ]