Kat's Expo Corner

Katpride

Story Collector
Hello everyone are we ready for some

LARK ANGST

(Jk it isn't all angst. Unless...)



Music Links (Spotify Playlists):
Lark Athlai
12-year-old Lark
Young Lark & Old Lark
Lily/Lark, Lark POV
Lily/Lark, Lily POV
Lily/Lark, Happy Ending Version
Lark/Fate



Table of Contents:
(Link jumps to the post in this thread)

Author's Note: The following expos are in reverse chronological order (according to the time of writing), but for the order of events in the Lark timeline you can follow the trend of darker green = older Lark.

A Terrible Thing To Be

Nineteen

Mirror, Mirror

Facing the Cliff

The First and Last Time

A Soft Prologue

Rage Against the Dying of the Light

Time Gone By

Sleeping on the Job

The Things You Know



Check out the Lark Compendium for appearances in threads (and the main Lark story)!
 
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A Terrible Thing To Be

You’re in love with her.

This is news to you, at first. It didn’t happen all at once. It built, slowly, every moment you spent with her: a rising tide that wrapped around your ankles and then your hips and then your chest and then it swallowed you completely. You were none the wiser to its advances until you looked at her one day and you were drowning, staring too hard at her worry-bitten lips and wondering how her arms would feel around you.

You, Lark Athlai, are in love with Lily Pond.

This is a terrible thing to be, because you are also dying. Not in an active way, but soon enough that to be with her would only break both of your hearts, and you need to save what remains of your spirit for the awful, unwanted struggle of continuing along with your truncated existence. To slip into despair now would be the end of you, and you aren’t allowing anything to be the end of you before you reach The End. Capitals and all.

So, you do what you do with everything too complicated for you to waste your numbered breaths on; you set it aside. You set her aside. You get one last good look at her and you tell yourself you’ve had your fill of looking. You tell yourself a lot of things. You tell yourself you don’t miss her, don’t pull out your phone sometimes just to stare at the messages she sends you, to scroll back through the logs with their jumbled timestamps and curt messages that you didn’t put as much thought into as you wish you had. You could fix that, but then again no you couldn’t, because if you had then it’d already be fixed.

You tell yourself that she doesn’t miss you, and that one hurts. After that you turn off your phone, and then you turn it back on and you block her. You delete all the pictures you have of her.

It isn’t personal. It’s just survival.

You, Lark Athlai, are very concerned with survival for someone who is sure they won’t live to see the new year.



(You unblock her a day later, and frantically dig through the recently deleted folder on your phone. You print the pictures and put them in a box under your bed, hating yourself for it and knowing you’d hate yourself more if you didn’t. You miss the time when you thought you knew everything. You miss the person you were, even when they’re right in front of you, because you can never go back the way you really want to go back. Back to a before that wasn’t a before, just a ‘then’ to your ‘now.’ You hate your now. You are the worst thing that ever happened to yourself. You are the best thing that ever happened to yourself. Reunions are hell.)



Despite the self-enforced distance, you think of her. In your quieter moments, between cleaning up messes in the past, between arranging everything that was already arranged when you got there the first time, between feeling the world spiral out from between your fingers as you lay on cool kitchen tiles. When you reach for the memories, they’re there. They’re always there. You hate yourself for reaching, and you hate yourself more for the relief it brings you.

You aren’t blind or stupid or as oblivious as you’d like other people to think, sometimes. In your memories, you can see the way she looks at you. You can see that your love isn’t- wasn’t, you remind yourself, wasn’t, past tense -one-sided. You may have pretended to look away when her eyes went soft around the edges, but you have so much more time to work with as compared to normal people, and no one to stop you from taking her in when the second hand had stopped ticking.

If you had been any less pressed for time, you could’ve had her. Maybe she would’ve made the offer herself, or accepted your request. If you were brave enough, you could’ve had her for however long of a time she’d relent to being yours. You don’t know if it would have worked. You don’t know if it would have lasted. You will never know, and you will take that not-knowing down into your grave.

You, Lark Athlai, are a coward.

You should be ashamed to wear your own face, and, in truth, you are. Your mind is fracturing apart under the stress. Your hands shake, now, when you aren’t holding them still or focusing them on a task. Old damage and old exhaustion and old terror mixing up cocktails in your nerve endings. Every emotion you have wears you thin, tires you out, feels like an old dollar store Halloween mask you’re putting on. You are preparing for your grand debut in the play that is “Lark Athlai Fucking Dies And No One Gives A Shit. The World Keeps Turning. The Timeline Marches On.”

It’s a working title. LAFDANOGAS-TWKT-TTMO is a hell of an acronym. It isn’t easy on the eyes. Neither are you, these days.

It is also not strictly true. The title, you mean. You’ve made friends along your travels, because you were lonely and they were there and you would’ve started falling apart a lot sooner without the company. Most of those friends will have abandoned you by now, or stopped thinking about you, or be otherwise unable to reach you by virtue of time travel being a hell of a getaway car, but Lily… she’s stubborn. You did always like that in a- well, in anything other than yourself.

It gets harder to deny your feelings every day. The love builds up inside of you with nowhere to go until you finally reach a point where the switch flips and it’s easy to claim that too much time has passed for you to go crawling back to her.

It turns out that the love likes to escape as tears, and you let yourself cry until you feel like you could float away on the breeze. Until you’re wrung out and dry, somewhere beyond exhausted and beyond sad, like your grief is tired of being contained in a human-shaped package.

Maybe you are also tired of being contained in a human-shaped package. Maybe it will be a relief, to die. To be at peace for once.

You have to tell yourself that, or you’ll lay down and stop before you’ve done all you need to do. Sometimes you wish you were blind and stupid and oblivious. It might make things easier.



(Nothing makes it easier. Nothing ever makes it easier. You have nothing to rage against but yourself, and doing that helps no one, it just leaves you and you and you even more tired and sad and angry. You are so god damn tired. You could sleep forever and still ask for five more minutes.)



When The End comes you tell yourself you are prepared. You go to it willingly, lamb to the slaughter. You go to it angrily, a tiger loosed from its cage. You go to it deaf and blind to the pleading from the you that doesn’t want to die.

You tell yourself you are prepared for anything.

You are not prepared to live.

You are not prepared for her to come to you, even though you asked her to. You laid upon her shoulders a request for a terrible favor. You asked Lily Pond to collect your corpse. You don’t know which of you is more surprised to find Lark Athlai still alive and breathing as the clock strikes midnight and the curtains fall.

 
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Nineteen

Lark is nineteen and the world rests on their shoulders. There is no older, wiser version of themself to rely on. They are the final draft, the last line of defense, the pinnacle of everything they’ll ever achieve. Their mind is heavy with memories, their steps are sure, and their heart aches when they think too long about their age. When they think too long about anything, really.

They’re older than they look, even factoring in the sleeplessness that makes strangers look at them with pity. They stopped keeping track long ago, the actual number buried somewhere amid the loops and spirals and corners of their Gordian knot of a timeline. But they keep moving, and they don’t think about it.

There are many loops to tidy up, tasks aplenty to keep their hands and mind busy. They’re the responsible one, the adult who guides their younger self through their first bike ride, who arranges for car rentals and pays for their apartment and takes care of a dozen other things they didn’t even think to question when they encountered them the first time around.

They keep the plates spinning and the fires lit, arranging happy coincidences and keeping watch over carefree moments so that their younger selves can be free. They remember how important it will be, is, was. They remember thinking their future self always seemed busy, always on the move, always a few steps ahead of the curve. It’s all true, of course, but the truth is less glamorous than they thought it’d be.

There’s no time to waste, and as such there’s no time to slow down. When they’re in the past, their body doesn’t age. It doesn’t need food or sleep. It doesn’t heal, but injuries don’t get worse either. They learned these things as soon as they were old enough to need to know them.

At first, they were a little mad that their future self hadn’t told them sooner. Then they started catching up, and they realized exactly why they’d done it, why they’ll follow this continuity loop to its end.

They don’t need to sleep, but they still feel the exhaustion building up until it drops them. There’s no time for nightmares, but they never quite feel rested when they drag themself out again. Their younger self doesn’t need to know that, not until they’re caught up.

Not until the future becomes the present, and someday becomes now. Better to be carefree, and leave the work and the worry and the weariness for later.

They tuck the sheets of their childhood bed under the chin of their childhood self and try to remember who they’re doing this for. They'll be gone before their parents come by, of course. Too many risks, there, too many questions they can't answer. Their silence is all they can give, sometimes, when they don't have a script to go off of.

They try to ignore the way the other Larks look at them, like a ghost and a savior and, worst of all, a stranger wearing their shared face. Like they have it all figured out. Like they're already dead. They can't seem to get away from it. They try limit their interactions with their past self to what is strictly necessary, and it feels like a worse betrayal than any of the other bridges they've burned. They take it back within a day. There are so few things they can hold on to, these days.

They do what they must, already knowing it won't be enough, always keeping just one step ahead of the despair. It's all they can do.

 
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Mirror, Mirror

“-and it isn’t like it matters, anymore, so what’s the point? What’s the point?” Lark’s voice trails off into nothingness, and they sniff once before wiping their nose roughly on the sleeve. Their voice sounds rough, all raspy and tight, scraping against their dry throat, but they can't bring themself to care when they only have themself for company.

“When do I tell them? How? How do you tell a person something like that?” They look down at their hands, then at the same hands trembling in the corner of their eye. They’re shaking more than they usually do, but it's alright.

Actually, no. No it isn’t. Nothing is alright. They sniff again, breathing shallow as they make a last futile effort to swallow back the tears building behind their eyes. The desk leg digging into their side will surely leave a mark, but they can’t be bothered to move beyond an uncomfortable shift, curling their legs up into their chest.

“Will they miss me?”

Their voice cracks, and they press their hand to their mouth as though that could stop the words from falling out into reality. The thought of being mourned, of being missed, of being gone forever, a fading memory sitting on a shelf somewhere they forgot to tidy up, only increases the tremors. They’ve held out this long, but they’re shaking apart at the seams, and they don't know if they'll be able to put themself back together afterwards. Tears stream down their face, warm and damp with the slight tang of salt.

“The damn milk is going to outlast me.” They laugh a little, just this side of hysterical, and they desperately try not to think about whether they’ll eat the oranges in the drawer in the fridge or if someone will remember to water their plants or if their letters will be found and read and taken seriously. Surely they will be, right? They couldn't bear the thought of anyone thinking they would joke about something like that.

“Our expiration date is looming. How do you bear it, Lark?” The question is a whispered rhetorical, but they still turn their blurry eyes to the side, looking out through a veil of silver hair. Their skirt is getting soaked, they note distantly. They still rest their cheek on top of their folded knees, feeling the soft damp fabric squish under their cheek.

Silence follows their question. Their reflection only stares back at them, perfectly mirroring their distress. They shouldn't expect anything more from a pane of glass, they suppose, but it still stings.

Where are you? they ask themself, not for the first time. They already know the answer, though. They wouldn't want to be here, either, if they could avoid it. This isn't the kind of moment they like to come back to, and they're swiftly running out of future Larks besides. It still hurts, a betrayal they aren't sure they can forgive themself for.

They rally eventually, as they must have known they would, and take vicious satisfaction in shattering the mirror. They don't bother to clean up the pieces before they cover it again and lose themself in the past. It won't matter, soon. Nothing will.

 

Trigger warnings: suicidal ideation, threats of suicide (by a relatively young child), facing one's mortality
Very sad, very bittersweet. Stay safe, mind the trigger warnings.



Facing the Cliff


Lark has considered their options. They really have. They’ve tried everything - messing with the past, messing with the future, making as much of a fuss in the present as they can - but nothing has changed. Nothing important, nothing unimportant, nothing at all.

Everything remains just the same as it always has, and they can’t take it any longer. They aren’t sure how they thought they could or how they made it this long before they hit their breaking point. Everyone’s got one, don’t they? That little line that everyone toes along when they’re trying to keep their lives balanced between normality and despair.

Well, they’ve been shoved over to the other side of that line for years now, and they are tired of trying to get back to where they were. If that’s even possible. They’re tired of everything, really. The world is dull and gray and awful and they don’t want to play any part in a timeline that forces them towards an awful, inevitable ending like the one they saw a little over two years ago. Two years, ten months, a week and three days. Twenty two hours and seven seconds, eight seconds, nine seconds…

Maybe… maybe it’s time to try something a little more drastic. They swallow around nothing, their throat terribly dry, and they look down at their hands. No, not just their hands, they won’t lie to themself. They’re really looking at the gun that rests in their palms, the metal warm in their grasp. The metal was once well-polished but is now scratched and scuffed, and they take a grim satisfaction in scoring a new line through the black paint with their thumbnail.

They rub a thumb over the - what’s it called, the handle? - smoothing over the scratch again. The woman they stole it from isn’t someone they want to think about, but she’s too tied up in all of this for them to just forget about her entirely. Unless, unless, unless. Unless this works. They aren’t really sure what all is in this thing, but they’re sure it would be enough.

This is too much. It’s the opposite of what they want, really. But maybe - maybe, maybe, maybe - the paradox might be enough to send everything crashing down, just like they do want. Maybe it would mean they could be free, in some way.

Just as they think they might have finally gathered the courage to raise the gun, they hear a soft chime and another hand presses it back down, flat against their lap. It’s a familiar hand, pale, long-fingered, scars criss-crossing the back of it. They don’t look up to see its owner, but the voice reaches their ears regardless.

“No.”

Tears well in their eyes, falling down their cheeks in salty lines that they don’t bother trying to wipe away. They’re too tired to fight, too tired to do more than blink in a futile effort to clear their vision. They keep their head down, even as a worn gray hoodie and silver hair shift in their periphery, the bed dipping as the person sits beside them.

“Not today, not ever. No,” the voice repeats, firm. They know themself, though, and they can hear the undercurrent of something else, something understanding or maybe uncertain or maybe just sad. Lark sobs, feeling terribly young and terribly confused and so, so tired and lost. Everything is terrible, and they don’t see any way it’s gonna get better. Ever, ever, ever.

“But if I-” their voice wavers, quiet and too low and they hate it, they hate it, they don’t have the control their older self does and it takes so long to learn but they can’t if they don’t have time- “I could- it would stop.”

They’re pleading, now, self-consciously aware of how young they sound, how young they are. Too young to deal with this crap, as their older self might say. A rough hand cradles their cheek, wiping at the still-falling tears with their thumb. They still have a grip on the gun, but it’s not going anywhere. Despite the gentleness of the touch holding it down and away from where it could hurt anybody, they’re all too aware that if it came down to it they wouldn’t win this fight. They never could.

A gusty sigh rocks the figure sitting beside them, and they feel it more than see it as their shoulders slump and their head dips in consideration. “Yes. You could, but it- it isn’t the right way. It isn’t what you want, not really.

“You want the pain and the not-knowing and the knowing to go away, I know. But this isn’t the answer, it can’t be. I wouldn’t be here if it was.”


“That’s the point!” They finally snap, jerking their head up to glare at the tired teenager slouched against the headboard. The exhausted pity in their eyes stops them in their tracks. It puts out the fire they just rekindled, and they’re left with nothing but soggy tinder and a desperation to make it different, this time. “You wouldn’t be here, and I wouldn’t have to- to- to follow this stupid loop, and march to my death!”

The darkness presses in around them and they can’t seem to get enough air, their breath coming short and their head aching. “If I-” they gulp down a breath that feels like nothing, but their lungs still inflate. They're still alive, and isn't it awful that that's the metric they measure everything by? “If I die here, then I don’t die there, and this whole thing unravels. It never happened, so this never happened, so then it did happen except it didn’t. A paradox, a big one. Everything goes away.”

“You don’t know what it would do,” the older teen says, shaking their head slowly and shifting to sit upright. But they still keep their hand over the firearm. They haven’t forgotten, or gotten distracted, or gone off script. Not even once. Not in all the time Lark has known their eldest self for, and that time covers their whole life. “I don’t know what it would do, but I know it wouldn’t be good. For anyone, not just us.”

They gesture with their free hand to the apartment around them, though Lark can tell they’re indicating something much bigger. “You have to keep going, even though it’s hard. Even though some days you want to lay down on the ground and never get up again, or set everything on fire and then walk into the flames. Living is the hardest thing anyone will ever ask you to do, trust me. But you can’t stop moving forward. I know you can do it. I’ve been there, and we got through it, and we are going to make the most of the time we do have.”

Lark looks down again, sniffling. They shake their head with a small, helpless sound, freeing one hand to rub at their face. They press their palm hard into their eye, until they see starbursts behind their eyelids.

“There is so much you have left to do. People you’ll meet, and places you’ll go, and things you’ll get to do.” Their voice picks up strength the longer they go on, ringing with undeniable truth. “You still have to meet the love of your life, and drag your dumbass friends out of the way of their own stupidity, and climb the Great Pyramid just to watch the stars and get yelled at by security. You wouldn’t want to miss that, now would you?”

Despite themself, Lark feels a watery laugh bubble up as a gentle hand runs through their hair, working through a tangle with delicate precision. And they can’t do it anymore. They don’t think they ever could. They release the gun with a huff and a sniff, and their older self pulls the weapon away. They don’t see where they put it, and they don’t care.

Their laughter turns to sniffles, and then they’re sobbing in earnest, wailing like a lost child. Like now that they’ve started they don’t know how to stop.

They curl their fingers into soft, dry fabric as it encompasses them. It takes them too long to realize that their older self has pulled them into a hug, and another long moment passes before they register the hand carding through their hair. Stubby fingernails scritch at their scalp, smooth their hair down, rub at their back. Always in motion, always full of momentum like they aren’t sure they’ll be able to pick themself back up again if they stop for even a moment.

“It’s going to be okay. Just keep putting one foot in front of the other, kid.”

They feel sleep pressing in on them as they’re rocked from side to side, slowly, listening to the faint hum of a familiar tune that they remember their mother singing, what feels like a lifetime ago. It’s a relief when the oblivion of unconsciousness rises up to meet them, even if it wasn’t the oblivion they thought they’d be facing tonight.

It's better this way, they decide even as their eyes slide shut. Much better.

(That night wasn't the last time they'd turn their back on dying, but it might have been the first. Trying to cheat their death only brought them to one closed door after another. Figuring out how to spend their life, on the other hand, now there was a road they were eager to walk. There were miles between them and the horizon, back then, so many secrets to uncover and trails to blaze. Years to burn, before they had to climb that cliff again.)


 

The First and Last Time

There was a first time for everything.

There was a first time that Lark opened their eyes to a world they could not yet understand, and there was a first time they toddled along on weak legs and collapsed into the arms of a waiting parent. There was a first hiccup and a first flare of power that paused the world around them. There was a first time they saw snow, accompanied by wide eyes watching the white drift down from the sky in wonderment.

There was a first cough and a first sniffle and a first cold that left them feverish and shaky, unable to tell if they were truly in the present or somehow in the past or future or nowhen at all, lost between the strands of time. And yet, there was always the reassuring presence of an older Lark, a wiser Lark, to lay a cool washcloth across their forehead and make sure they took their medicine on time. To make sure they were in the present, that they hadn’t been abandoned somewhere no one else could find them.

There was a first crush and a first heartbreak and tears soaked into their mother’s perfumed sweater. There was a first attempt at baseball and a first trip, tumble, crash over second base and flat onto their face. There were tears, then, too, and the rough hands of their father picking them up and brushing the dirt and dust off of them, kneeling down to make sure the scrapes and bruises weren’t as serious as their bawling made it seem. Swiping away the tears and convincing them to stay in the game, though it would be the last time they took the field.

There was a first time they saw, and a first time they knew, and then there were thousands of new things that they had to do and see and places to visit and people to meet, all in order to make it so that their life was fulfilled. So they could pass with no regrets. There was a time for growing up, and making mistakes, and correcting those mistakes or leaving them be. There were friends, most of whom passed through their life and moved on with only memories left behind. There were those who left on their own, and those they pushed away, and those who they only met through their own power and could not- would not find again. There were those who stayed, and those were the most precious of all.

And just as there was a first time for everything, so too is there a last time for everything. There is a last time Lark visits their younger self, and a last ruffling of silver hair and fond grin and repetition of sage advice. There is a last time they walk through an apple orchard with the sun on their skin and a voice they could never forget how to love ringing faint in their ears. There is a last time they pause time, and a last time the world goes still and quiet around them. There is a last embrace from the timestream, and there is the last time they are deposited back in the present with only their memory and the history books to say that they were ever gone at all.

There is a last time they see their own face, caught in a sob or creased in anger or with the blank forced acceptance of inevitability and the tinge of pity. There is a last moment, one they cannot see past, cannot know past. One they thought they had accepted, but something primal in them will not allow them to give up the rage or despair or the foolish hope that this time, things will be different.

There is a last time for everything.

 

A Soft Prologue

There are moments you can’t run away from. Not in the heat of it all, the immediacy and urgency breathing down your neck and restricting your thoughts to the next movement, the next instant. There’s a certain kind of freedom found in the narrow scope of a fistfight, the sting of a scrape or the unforgiving coolness of a blade demanding center stage in the mind and promising terrible consequences for being ignored.

There are moments that stick, tacky and dripping and impossible to forget, drowning the entire world in red and shifting everything two centimeters to the left. Juice, paint, blood, none of it stains quite the same as a terrible revelation that only comes to light when it’s a little too late to do anything about it.

There are softer moments, too. Curled in scratchy hay, half-asleep from the steady rhythm of the workhorse hauling its trailer through the field. A warm body next to theirs, hand in hand, quiet conversation drifting over them like a light fog. A face that they can’t forget, so vivid and real they could count every freckle, every stray hair falling out of a messy braid, every shift and pinch of expression. A sense-memory etched into the backs of their eyelids.

In their memory, they reach out a hand to trace the back of a curled finger along the gentle curve of her jaw, and she pushes forward into their space like it’s the simplest thing in the world, and they know it can’t last but they let themself have this anyway. Up until the trailer comes to a halt and they’re dumped out along with the hay.

Lark was sixteen, and they just wanted to forget about everything for a while. Where better to run from their future than the distant past? A quick change into some clothes stolen off a drying line, and they could’ve been any lost farmer’s kid, albeit with some odd coloration.

In hindsight, it was hypocritical of them to so eagerly go chasing after connections in the past while all but refusing to pursue them in the present. Maybe it was the distance - only they could cross the gap between then and now, an easy bridge to burn if it came down to that. Maybe it was something cruel and cold inside of them that insisted on a foolproof way to cut their losses, a relationship doomed by something other than their own knowledge.

Regardless of their intentions, they found what they were looking for. Luck and circumstance led them to a girl around their age, or maybe a little older, who laughed when they interrupted her apple picking by nearly falling out of the tree she was reaching up into. She was kind enough to call off the herding dog when it tried to chase them away, instead beckoning them into the shade of the tree to share an apple and swap stories.

Although they only barely matched the part they set for themself, she quickly accepted their story. Spinning themself into an eccentric traveler was close enough to the truth without revealing anything incriminating, and it meant she didn’t question their odd way of acting or speaking or doing anything, really. The details of it hardly mattered when held up against the reality of a stranger in her small slice of the world. They were sure to tell her of the short duration of their visit; a summer, and no more, as they had the whole world to see.

It was simple, in a way so few things are. They settled into the routine of afternoons and nights by her side, quietly disappearing back to their own time every once in a while when the strain caught up to them. Still, they did their best to stretch the days into weeks, and weeks into months. Hiding their powers from her was a necessity, but it stung every time she’d fuss over their unhealed scratches or give them an odd look when they stumbled over a slang word at least a century out from being known. It would never have been something that lasted years, or even more than the summer, but they could almost pretend otherwise when she’d take their hand and smile at them like that.

She had big ideas about the state of the country, and the way she’d run the farm when she grew old enough to take over, and how she’d rear the new filly her best mare had just given birth to. Lark would follow her around the farm and listen to her endless well of opinions on nearly every aspect of the daily minutiae of her life, lending a hand where they could and enjoying the cadence of her voice more than any of the individual words she spoke. She didn’t seem to mind if they didn’t have much of an opinion themself, and she’d teach them things they didn’t even think to ask about.

Now, the knowledge sits with them, and the girl is long gone. They know how to tell the sweetest oranges by scent and how to calm a spooked horse and how to tip a cow, but that knowing has nowhere to go except for the unfading photo album of their memory. They close their eyes and remember endless lessons on braiding, soft hair that they kept fumbling every time she smiled at them, which step to avoid when climbing the ladder to the loft in the barn, the way her fingers fit in between their own. It's almost enough, except for when it isn't.



In the present day, her family’s farm is still standing, but no longer tended by anyone. It isn’t the same as they remember, with renovations brought about by the many faceless descendents of her family line. The farmhouse is unrecognizable, having caught fire one especially dry summer and been rebuilt from the ground up. The fields are overgrown, and the wood of the barn seems barely capable of holding its own weight.

Lark, no longer sixteen, pushes past the barely opened door and climbs to the loft just to watch the stars through the collapsed roof of the old barn. The constellations are the same ones she taught to them on endless warm summer nights, but the wood is cold beneath them and the breeze cuts through their sweater like a knife.

If they had the time or the desire, maybe they’d replace the crumbling planks or even venture into the house. But, as it stands, they’re likely the only person to remember this place, a little farm out in the middle of nowhere with a town that dried up over the years until the last stubborn farmer finally admitted defeat and moved to more fertile land.

Soon this farm will be forgotten entirely, so there’s really no point in fixing it now. Better to let it fade into obscurity until some intrepid explorer stumbles across a collapsed barn where, once, there was light and laughter and…

The moon hangs high above like a watchful eye, full and patient, turning everything to silver where it shines through the hole in the roof. Maybe, in their next life, they’ll be able to watch the dawn with her again.

They would like that.

 

Rage Against the Dying of the Light

“It’s not fair!”

“I know it isn’t! You think I don’t know that?”

“Then why don’t you do something about it?!”

“I can’t. You know we can’t.”

“Why?”

That’s the million dollar question, isn’t it? Lark - sixteen and too wise for their youthful appearance, too tired for their bright eyes, roped into all of this by inevitability and responsibility - drags their hands down their face, exhausted and annoyed. “We just can’t. There are rules. There are limits.”

It’s an argument that’s been tread too many times, and the twelve-year-old Lark standing before them is already puffing up like an angry little bird, their hands balled into fists and arms tight against their sides. “And who makes the rules?”

“I… I don’t know.” The older Lark admits, looking away for a moment, shuffling their feet, scratching at their wrist. It isn’t the answer they’d like to give, but it’s all they have. “They’re just there.”

“Well, then. I’m going to break them.” With a stomp of their foot, the younger Lark disappears, venturing into the future. If going to the past doesn’t change anything, surely visiting the future must be the way to go.

There’s a reason going into the future is dangerous. It’s a game of chance. They don’t know where they’ll end up, and there are so many paths they travel down, so many places they’ll eventually be. It’s overwhelming, all-encompassing, like grasping at a thousand dangling strings and trying to find the right one to pull on. They’re pulled every which way, but the current Lark of any time always serves as the strongest anchor. They reach for it, finding purchase in the timeline.

“Get down!” They appear in the middle of a fight, and a seventeen-year-old Lark shoves them aside before they can get stabbed in the face. It earns the older teen a nasty cut to the arm, and it’s second nature to reach for their sense of time once more, although it’s clumsy when they wrench it forward rather than back.

Time resists being changed. It tries to restore the natural order of things, to send them back to where they’re supposed to be. They refuse, tugging and twisting and swimming against the current. It would be so easy to give up, to give in, to fall victim to the acceptance that has corrupted their older selves.

But they refuse. They have to try again, so they venture farther forward. They appear in a messy apartment, the roar of a passing train rattling in their bones. They trip on a discarded sweater and a pale arm catches them, sets them back upright again. “Shh.”

“What are you-” They begin, but are cut off by a hand over their mouth. Childishly, impulsively, they stick their tongue out, and the older Lark pulls their hand away again, wiping it on their jeans.

The shifting lights outside pause, and there’s a moment of absolute stillness.

“What does it look like, little me?” The elder Lark asks in the jarring silence of stopped time, raising an eyebrow as they continue to carefully rifle through a stack of papers.

“I dunno, that’s why I asked,” the smaller Lark replies, rolling their eyes.

“Don’t worry about it,” they answer, “You’ll find out in time.”

Before they can protest further, time resumes, and another flash of light heralds the arrival of sixteen-year-old Lark, who grabs the twelve-year-old’s arm and drags them back to their own time.



“This isn’t helping. You and I both know that. Just give up,” the wiser Lark advises, releasing them once they’re both back in the same apartment they started in.

“Did you?” The younger Lark asks, leveling a vicious glare their way. They’re gratified to see their older self look away, a frown twisting their lips down. “Then neither can I.”

And so it continues. They root through the timeline for significant moments, and at every turn they find their older self putting everything back together, stopping them from trying to burn everything to the ground, dragging them back to their own time again and again and again. Stopping them, holding them back, always one step ahead.

It’s a rigged game. Lark knows they aren’t going to win, but they can’t give up. Giving up means moving on, means letting everything happen just because ‘that’s the way it has to be,’ means accepting that they’re on a shorter timeline than they could ever have anticipated.

Maybe they can change things in the past. Maybe their future self is a coward and a liar, and they’re hiding the truth from them. And so they travel back, find a nine-year old Lark, try to tell them the truth before they can uncover it on their own.

Their past self is excited to see them. Usually it’s the older Larks that go back to visit. They remember being so happy at the rare visit from an intermediary Lark. If they can just-

But the younger Lark is chattering so brightly, tugging at their hands, eyes sparkling. Before they can get a word out edgewise, they’re pulled back, more roughly than they’ve ever been treated before.



They tumble to the ground, momentum carrying with them even as they’re transported to another time. They skid on the damp grass of a moonlit clearing in the woods, teeth already bared as they get to their feet, but their future self is already speaking before they get a chance.

“The fuck do you think you’re doing?!” The sixteen-year-old asks. They’re taller, stronger, faster, and so much angrier than Lark thought they had the capacity for. Finally, their patience is at an end. Good, because that means both of them are equally miserable. “Quit being stupid! You are making everything so much harder.”

“You aren’t making it any better, yourself! Why don’t you just stop trying to stop me? That’d make it easier, wouldn’t it?” The twelve-year-old bites back.

“Oh, I can’t wait until you have to be in my shoes.” The older Lark stalks forward, voice rising with their temper. “And then you can see what a brat you’re being right now.”

“You think you know so much more-”

“Because I do! That’s literally how this works!”

“Yeah, well, predict this,” the younger Lark snaps, throwing an inexperienced punch. Quite predictably, the older Lark catches their wrist, tightly enough that they can’t even pull their hand back. They struggle in the hold, but their future self will always be stronger, wiser, more prepared.

“We both know this is going nowhere. Give up.” The older teenager is dispassionate, unmoved even as they try to yank at their arm with their opposite hand, even as they lean back far enough that they’d fall if it weren’t for the hand on their wrist, even as they twist their hand around every which way.

“No! You can’t make me. I’ll never be like you.” They snarl, frustrated tears building in their eyes.

“You will. You don’t have a choice. None of us have a choice.” Lark is so tired, and their voice holds too much solemnity for someone of their physical age. “You’ll learn. I did.”

They let go suddenly, and Lark falls back into the soft grass. They yell wordlessly, face crumpling. Frustrated, angry, grieving. Tears blur their vision, and they wipe at their face in a futile effort to bring everything back into focus. It’s pointless, all pointless. They’re just one person. Just a kid, really. What do they know about anything?

Green flashes in their vision, and they’re alone. They curl their legs close to their chest and rest their forehead against the tops of their knees, closing their eyes. There’s nothing to look at, anyways.



Somewhere, a wind chime rings.

Soft footsteps, and someone takes a seat beside them. They see green and silver and blue in their peripheral vision, and they hadn’t realized they were shivering until there’s a blanket laid gently across their shoulders.

Lark shrugs off the offered comfort, ready to snap at their sixteen-year-old self, but when they look up they’re greeted by a different, but no less familiar, face. The eldest Lark. Even they can’t stay mad at the face they saw fighting to the last breath at the end of their days, so far into the future and yet not far enough. Never far enough.

“I know,” the elder Lark says, short and simple but still somehow gentle. Sympathy softens their eyes, casts all their sharp edges in a more forgiving light. Lark hates them for it, just a little bit. They hate that it works.

“How can you-” the younger Lark chokes on their words, voice strangled when they finally find the will to continue. “How are you just… okay with all this?”

The clearing is quiet for a minute, the older Lark tipping their head back to look at the stars. Their words emerge as a fine mist in the chilly air when they finally break the silence. “Because you aren’t.”

This Lark is so close to the end of the line that they already look like they remember them looking, hair cascading down their back and scars wrapping around their hands and the weight of the world on their shoulders. And yet. When they look back at their younger self, something in their gaze is sharp, burning, thorned, just like the briar digging into their heart. And Lark realizes, finally, despairingly, that they were being stupid. So, so stupid.

They never gave up, not really. The anger is still there. The despair is still there. They just learned to live with it.

Really, what else could they have done? They were given the choice between fighting a losing battle with every breath, or making the most of what time they still had. They let themself try, once, and then they moved on. Of course they did. They had to, or it would’ve consumed them.

The younger Lark sits with this realization for a long moment. Their future self pulls the blanket back up around them, pulling them into their side with an arm around their shoulders. “I know.”

It’s a quiet night, and there’s time enough for them to try again later. Maybe this time it’ll be different. Maybe it won’t be. They can’t give up yet, not before they know they’ve tried everything. But maybe they can rest, just for a moment.

 
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Time Gone By

Bright sunlight filters in through an open window, illuminating a cozy bedroom suited for a young child. Cubbies line the walls, full of toys and clothes and everything else an inquisitive young mind could want. A bed is set up in the corner, sheets tangled and blanket halfway to the floor. Currently, the sole inhabitant of the room is laying on the carpet, scribbling away on a pad of paper with an expression of utmost concentration.

Distantly, windchimes ring, bright and clear and melodic. It’s the perfect summer afternoon, the warmth from the sun offset by a light breeze that rustles the papers scattered across the floor and sets the windchimes off again.

“Hey, firefly.”

The child looks up from their coloring sheet, tossing their crayons aside and scrambling to their feet when they look up to see their older self peering down at them.

“Hi!” They chirp, throwing their arms around one of the teenager’s legs and cranking their head back to look up at the much taller person. The older Lark huffs good-naturedly and pats their back, a fond smile on their face.

Steady hands pick them up by the armpits, and their older self hoists them up into the air, holding them at arm’s length. The little Lark blinks in confusion, but soon starts giggling as they’re twirled in a gentle circle and set back on their feet again.

The teenager sits down amidst the many papers scattered across the floor, adopting a casual sprawl as though bones and aching joints are far-fetched tales dug up from the archives of a distant, previously undiscovered land. “Whatcha drawing?”

The child clumsily plops down as well, treating their older self’s long legs like safety railings as they lean precariously over to pick up a paper from the ground. They hold it up with a smile, and Lark takes it, scanning the page and absently smoothing over the slight crumple from where they had grabbed it.

“It’s super heroes,” their younger self explains, breathlessly excited to show off their work. Lark nods seriously, although it mostly looks like scribbles. Sadly, they know they would only do marginally better if they tried their hand at the same subject. Their art skills have not improved very much over the years.

Little hands grab at Lark’s hoodie strings, nearly choking them before they indulgently lean forward, tilting their head to let little-them whisper in their ear. It’s a loud, much too spitty experience, but they’re trying their best, so the older Lark just grins and bears it. “You wanna go to the park?”

“Sure, kiddo,” they agree, tilting back. The younger Lark gasps as green light surrounds them both, dissolving into peals of laughter when they fall back against soft grass and not carpet. Lark sets them on their feet and they scamper off towards the playground without a backwards glance. The other Lark waiting at the location smiles and waves after them before disappearing to another point in the timeline.

In that moment, the world is sun-drenched and time has the consistency of honey, slow and sweet and forgiving. Lark rolls onto their side, and the grass beneath them tickles at their ankles and hands.

When they decide to get up, they’ll have grass in their hair and stains on their clothing, but that’s a worry for later. Right now, nothing in the world matters more than making sure their younger self is enjoying their youth. Besides, where could be safer than under the watchful eye of their future self?

As though sensing their thoughts, Lark glances back to be sure their older self is watching as they climb up one of the bendy metal ladders that every playground designer seems to think is a great idea and every child knows to fear. The older Lark grins and calls out to them, one hand cupped around their mouth. “You’re doing great!”

They’ve long since outgrown the need for approval from their future selves, but they know how much it means to the younger ones. They remember being small, back when they thought their older self was the coolest thing since frozen french toast sticks.

They know they aren’t the same Lark they once were. Every time they visit their past self, they’re reminded of how drastically time can change a person. Time catches everyone in its net, dragging them along until who they were is but a distant dream compared to who they are.

Identity is a tricky thing, and Lark counts themself lucky in that they never had to struggle very much with it. They had the benefit of knowing exactly who they would turn out to be, a person to point to and say, “Yes, that’s who I am. That’s who I want to be, and who I will be, given time.”

Well, that time passed, as all time does, and now they look at the scenario from the other side. They want nothing more than to save themself from the mistakes they’ve already made, to throw their timeline off its tracks and shape themself into a different person, but doing so would throw everything into utter turmoil. To change events… that’s something they can’t take back, and to be frankly honest they aren’t sure it’s something they’re able to do.

They tried, once. It didn’t work out. Sometimes they still wonder, though. Hope is a fickle thing, difficult to stamp out even when all of the evidence is stacked against it. Here, in the hazy heat of the afternoon, with the laughter of children filling the air and the breeze cool on their sun-warmed skin, they could almost imagine a brighter future.

Considerations for another time. Right now, they push themself up from the ground and wander over to spot their child self as they attempt to brave the harrowing gauntlet that is the monkey bars. They settle into their role gladly. They’re here to watch, and encourage, and give their child self everything they already had.

It’s what they have to do, but it’s also what they want to do. They wouldn’t trade it for anything. There’s no point in waiting for time to start being kinder to those in its embrace.

They know the script, and they’re set to play their part faithfully until the clock runs out.

 

Sleeping on the Job

Lark finds many ways to fill their time, some more or less conventional than others. For the past few weeks, they've been working at a milkshake shop. It's one of the rare odd jobs that they've picked up in the almost-present, and Lark finds that they actually kind of like it, at least most of the time. Today, though, everything seems to take so much more effort than it usually does.

Though they may occasionally like to act as though they have no idea what’s going on, playing up the clueless not-blonde angle to better pull the wool over people's eyes, Lark can generally keep track of the things they need to. But today, their thoughts are sluggish, like an engine revving when there’s nothing in the tank.

Look, now they're even making car metaphors. They don't even know how to drive, much less how engines work. They make that joke to their coworker, forgetting the part where they haven't befriended him yet, and his responding smile is more than a little confused.

They don't even have the energy to play any pranks today. No sleight of hand as they slide glasses onto tables, no stickers or lollipops hidden inside napkins, hardly any practical japery. They go to blend a shake and forget how to operate the damn machine, staring at it blankly for almost three minutes before they can recall how to start it. They don’t notice the sprinkles tangled in their hair until an old lady points them out. Basically, they aren't on top of their game, but they're playing the game anyways, and they can't tell if they're winning or losing. Probably losing.

Definitely losing, Lark amends after they trip on their way to a booth and only a hasty time stop saves them from a big mess and a disappointed customer. Even then, there's a heart-pounding moment where they almost forget that objects keep going if they’re still holding them. Their powers are next to useless when they can’t remember how they work, they think even as they hand the drink off and fake a smile.

Maybe they shouldn’t have come in today. Or maybe they shouldn’t have come in today as they are right now. As their "today" self. It isn’t too late to just… go back to bed, and try the rest of this day on tomorrow.

That’s a funny phrase, isn’t it? Back to bed. They can’t remember the last time they slept the whole night through, much less in a proper bed rather than wherever they decide to pass out. That probably isn’t the best sign, but it’s their life. They can decide how to live it. That's basically the only thing they can decide.

Maybe they’ll just… close their eyes… for a moment…

Lark drops like a stone, but before they can fall very far, there’s a flash of green light and another Lark appears, this one light on their feet and quick to catch their past self. They hoist the sleeping Lark up like a long, boneless cat, arms around their ribs until they can lean the sleeping Lark at an angle against them. Ugh, this is so much easier when the Lark they're trying to haul around is small. Why did they have to get so tall?

The small crowd of worried onlookers watches on, but the new Lark smiles brightly at the customer whose table their past self almost fainted on. “Haha, sorry about that. I’ll just get them outta your hair,” they quip, before the light flashes again and they’re gone.

Out of sight, Lark holds tightly to their past self, anchoring themself to the awareness of hair curling against their face and weight on their shoulder as they drift within a tunnel of green light and shifting visions. They keep their arm securely around their waist, feeling for the familiar tug of their past self within the main timeline. All they need is a time when they're in their apartment, and they can go from there. It takes a moment, but they find the anchor and tug the both of them to shore.

“We can’t keep doing that,” they mumble once the light fades and resolves itself into their apartment, a few weeks displaced from their past self's proper time. A third Lark stands in the living room, packing a backpack which is propped on the couch atop a living mound of blankets and pillows. They look up at the flash of light, then turn back to their task.

“Doing what?” The youngest Lark asks, unphased by the interruption but clearly confused by the lack of context.

“Nothing. Well, you'll see.” They sigh. Yeah, they'll find out soon enough. On both counts. Hoisting their charge up again when they start to slip, Lark reaches for the Timestream. One more jump.

The green light swallows them again, spitting them out in the past Lark's present, and Lark can finally cross the few steps between themself and the couch. They lower their past self gently into the mess of blankets, and only then do they fall into the armchair themself. They're already tired, even though the better part of them feels like they just woke up. Nowhere near as tired as they were, of course, or they'd probably be asleep in their own time already, but maybe tired enough to go back and catch a nap anyways.

Their eyes drift to the Lark asleep on the couch. They'll be alright if they leave, right?

That's a silly question. Of course they'll be alright. Lark is living proof that they'll be perfectly fine. The apartment is safe, and their past self is safe, and it'll be fine.

Grumbling under their breath, they tiptoe into the bedroom - stupid, they know that they sleep like a rock, there's no point in sneaking around - and snag another blanket off the bed, returning to lay it over their past self. There. Now they can go nap.

(They putter around for another hour, tidying here and there and skipping forward in small increments until the other Lark starts to stir. They won't even remember it, they already know they won't, but they do it anyways. Some habits die hard.)

(Lark wakes up, and they don't go back to work. They don't go back the next day, or the one after, and eventually it's easy to say that it's been too many days, that some things are better left in the past. Just another burning bridge in the rear-view mirror.

They don't know why they think of the metaphor. They don't even know how to drive.)

 

The Things You Know

The terrible thing about children is that they’re curious. You show a child the world and they seek to understand it. They know so little, and every new thing they uncover is endlessly fascinating to them. Day by day, their world expands.

You give a child all of time to explore, and they want to know what happens at the end of that time. They ignore your warnings - because you did warn them, of course you did, and you kept them sheltered for as long as you had been - and they wind the clock forward until the ticking stops.

And they see what waits for all time travelers, when the last grain of sand falls. When the clock runs out. Terror and acceptance and rage and sorrow all condensed into one moment, a scream and an explosion of light so blindingly brilliant it will dance in their mind’s eye for years to come.

And then Time itself rips them away, tosses them back into the bedroom they had been so eager to explore beyond.

And then they understand. And they grow up. And they become you.

You, who knows too much and too little, who is so powerful but so powerless to the whims of fate and time and causality.

You, who will one day have to face the hour of terror and acceptance and rage and sorrow. You know you will not live to see the next hour after that, with stillness and emptiness and grief and life continuing on. Not even the minute. Or the second. You've never been able to Travel past that end, try as you might to reach the millions, billions, trillions of seconds that follow that one, irreversible moment.

The river of Time is cruel. It doesn’t play fair. What it takes, it does not return. You can only exploit its more mutable rules, working with what you can bend until you finally break. Until Time comes for you, as it does for every creature in its embrace.

There’s a certain peace in knowing how your story ends, even if that knowledge weighs heavily in your mind. Has weighed in your mind since that day, so long ago and so far in the ever-approaching future. There is always a final book and a final chapter and a final page, even in the best of stories.

At least you have the time before that; you have as many compounded loops as your body and mind can bear, giving you the time you need to squeeze the joy and brightness you can from the world, to live the moments that make everything worth it.

The specter of your future may haunt you, but it cannot reach you just yet.

You still have time.

 
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