Notes: Okay so refrence to Rent (looooove it) in here and past relationship between shawn/oc woman. Past is past! She might show up later to help him if something big/bad (hint hint...) happens because i like her but THEY WONT GET TOGETHER this is shassie bitches.
Warning: Suicidal thoughts, panic attacks, near attempt, yeah basic warnings like usual.
Begging: PLEASE PLEASE comment/review okay cause like i dunno about this yet and im like dipping my foot in the canon divergence shawn waters and im unsure.
Shawn noticed Lassie watching him, he noticed the stares, the confused looks, the silence of the observer. He felt like a rat in a cage, running around manically, trying to figure out his goal, big blue eyes catching every move. At first he thought he was making himself see what wasn't there, watching for signs that couldn't be real. Then he realized it couldn't be, because there was no reason he'd want Carlton Lassiter staring at him, he didn't want the detectives attention!
'Methinks the lady doth protest too much.' The annoying little voice, suspiciously sounding like Gus, bumped into his thoughts and made him snort. He didn't want Lassie watching him, no way. He just noticed that it was happening, that's what he did after all. He noticed things.
Shawn picked at his Chinese noodles with disinterest trying to summon up any logical reason for the attention. Attraction wasn't an option, and he wasn't a suspect in any of Lassie's cases. Had he done something strange recently? Well more than flounce around and grope people.
'Grope Lassie.' The tiny-head-Gus sing-songed and Shawn growled to himself. He leaned the chair he'd been balancing on even further back, throwing the chinese in (well near) the trash can. With a sigh he let the wheels clatter to the floor, and propped his elbows on the desk, burying his hands in his hair as he glared at the stain from his smoothie on the wood. It probably shouldn't bother him that much, people stared sometimes. They didn't always have reasons, maybe Lassie was distracted lately.
'C'mon man.' Tiny-head-Gus groaned from somewhere inside Shawn's head. 'What's really up, Shawn?' He couldn't answer. 1. Because he was having some kind of telepathic conversation with a voice in his head, and 2. because he didn't know. What could Lassiter really be deducing?
Shawn knew that man was a good detective. Not in the same sense as the fake-psychic, he didn't see clues and put things together like rapid fire in his brain. He didn't see patterns in nothing, or see clues under clues under dirt. No, Lassie's game was different.
He played people.
He saw lies, he saw pasts, he saw pain. He picked out mental weaknesses and shot at them relentlessly. Guilty or not, Carlton Lassiter would figure you out and tear you to pieces. Shawn knew that, Shawn was scared of that. Lassiter was the only person he was worried could pick out his lies. The man already knew he wasn't psychic, Shawn knew Lassiter was certain of that. Though the detective never brought it up with much force, or even tried to prove it, which was interesting.
A mystery for another time.
The lie Shawn hid with all his mind, all his being, every ounce of willpower...That was the secret he was scared Lassie would pick out. The lie sown into every movement, every breath, every moment of his life. His highs and his crashes, his glass world and the darkness bubbling and giggling beneath. The lie no one knew, the lie he'd kept from his Sherlock Holmes of a father, and Dr. Shrinky-dink of a mother. The beast in his mountain cave, the monster no one got close enough to see. That was the lie Shawn was worried Lassiter would decode, fight into, figure out with his icy eyes and clever mind.
The lie he couldn't let be discovered...What if that's why Lassie was staring?
Shawn's head snapped up, hands still in his hair as he stared at nothing. Eyes wide and frightened, gray bouncing with the horror. What if Lassiter had finally tore his way through the walls, peeled the paint and threw the dirt. Swam Shawn's moat, found his beast. Shawn didn't have a princess to offer, just a dark shadow that twirled and twisted around you, swallowing you whole. A monster that couldn't be tamed, or killed, only destroyed; and to destroy the beast was to destroy the man that it hid within.
Panic burned red hot in his chest, a tornado ripping through his high hours early. All his willpower, his smiles, his jokes, his lies being torn away from him. Snatched and ripped was his daylight, the night falling before dusk. Sunlight dragged away, claws still in the ground as the panther cackled in the corner of his being. Prowling and purring as it lurked, circling the shrinking fawn of happiness in the center. The little animals light already dim, the panthers darkness swallowing the world around it. Shawn couldn't fight the panther back, he couldn't summon memories to hold it at bay. He wasn't ready, it wasn't time, but it was happening.
The inevitable fall of a high.
Breath was stolen, air like a drop of a rain in a desert. Eyes burnt like coals, hands shaking like leaf in the wind. Chest heaving, up and down it moved, pulling nothing in expelling everything out. Body jerking, throat closed, air gone, sight dimming. Shawn was on his knees, having dropped from the chair when it started. This wasn't the worst, it was only the build up before the crescendo. When the fawn fell, and the panther ruled once more.
The pseudo-psychic curled in on himself, down like a man praying as he lost control of the only thing in the world that was truly his. His mind yanked from his grasp, the panther grinning like a Joker as he came in for the final kill, the fawn on the ground already given up. Shawn gasped, one breath of air into his lungs before it happened, the loudest note in his choir. The final kill.
He screamed.
Shawn hadn't screamed in years, he'd been close many times, but he always swallowed it before it escaped to the air. Before it notified someone, gave the call his body wanted to send out. Before it got him help, and before it told everyone how broken he was. The last time he'd fallen and screamed was five years, four months and six days ago. He'd left before his girl of the moment brought him to the hospital, and started over again.
Shawn had screamed a lot as a child, but could always pass it off as a nightmare. As a teen he began to gain control, and when he lost his grasp on the leash everyone assumed he was being obnoxious. When he finally climbed to adulthood he didn't scream, or at least not around people. Even though it felt like a demon was ripping his throat to shreds when he held it back, even if his lungs impaled themselves on his ribs and his heart went like an a-bomb, he never screamed.
He couldn't let anyone see, anyone hear, that the man they knew was a creation. A game of pretend Shawn played during the day, the man he wanted to be. Screaming meant weakness, and it meant help, but Shawn was to afraid of the first to forgo the second. This fall was different, this crash hurt more. His fawn fell too soon, and the panther was too strong, and the battle within his mind was too loud.
He just wanted silence, he just wanted peace. For once in his life...he just needed it to stop.
Shawn screamed until the one gasp of air he'd pulled in was spent, and his lungs were flat. He rocked back and forth on his knees, breath short and bursting, tears burning and itching there way down his face. His throat felt like it was stuffed with lava, and his lungs still didn't have enough air. This was the worst attack he'd had in years, the worst fall. Like he'd been in an airplane for years and now he was being pushed out, no parachute and no hope of survival.
Somewhere inside he was certain Lassiter had figured him out, or at least part of him. That was what made this crash the worst, he might be figured out. Everyone could know, they all might find out. They'll hate him, he can already see their faces. Disgust, hurt, pity, disappointment, sadness. All of them turning away, leaving him alone with the panther, the smoke, the battle, the beast. Leaving him to fight it all on his own with a broken stick.
They'd all leave him he was certain of it. His breath was coming quicker, shallower. Shawn would be alone, he'd be alone with that thing inside of him and he couldn't...wouldn't...he can't…
He was going to be alone, and he was going to fall.
Shawn doubled forward, face near the ground as he hugged himself, reaching for control when it was miles away. He was trying for breath, fighting for light, but the panther just sat in the center of everything. Black fur sleek and face smug as it tailed swished back and forth with pleasure. Shawn knew his battle was lost, and that the happiness he held wasn't returning.
At least not today.
Shawn felt heavy, air hanging over his limbs, sunlight weighing him down. He gasped again, sitting up straight and looking towards the ceiling. Searching for something in the cracked white that he'd never find.
'You'll be fine.' Tiny-head-Gus whispered in his mind, and Shawn pulled air into his lungs. He pulled in his breath counting slowly to four, holding the oxygen in his lungs as he counted to 7, and then releasing it slowly. Already his body began to relax, even if the beast was still ruling his kingdom. It still was too late, the monster had taken it's hold and Shawn was powerless.
So Shawn did what he had to when a fall came too soon, he hid. Turning his phone off and pulling his helmet over his head he stopped being the always laughing, always cheerful psychic. Swinging one leg over the seat, gripping the handlebars and staring at pavement he became the pathetic, weak, undependable man he truly was.
He turned the bike on and began driving, Shawn couldn't stay.
"You're...leaving?" Gus said, staring at Shawn, mouth opening around words that couldn't form and closing on syllables that disappeared on his tongue. "Shawn we're supposed to be going to our dorm room tomorrow! Where are you gonna go?"
"Wherever I want, buddy. I'm eighteen now!" Shawn preened, grinning so big it hurt his cheeks. His mask had gotten better over the years, even Gus stopped asking 'what's wrong'. Shawn pretended the crumbling inside brown eyes he'd known his entire life wasn't tearing his gut to pieces. "Oh c'mon, don't worry. I'll send plenty of post cards and visit sometimes! You'll do great in the big bad world." Gus's lip trembled, his eyes closed and he turned his cheek away. Shawn knew what was coming, even though it hadn't happened since they were 9. Gus was going to cry. Not the disappointed cry of getting a 'C' on his Geometry test, or the angry cry of breaking up with Maddie.
No, this was the cry that only ever happened because of Shawn.
Last time it was because Shawn had said he was going to move in with his mother. The same face, the same slow heartbreak of being left behind. The pain that could only be felt by a best friend, and the pain that usually caused the other to stay.
Shawn couldn't stay.
"Hey, hey dude!" Shawn said, pulling a hand through ridiculously blonde hair. "Don't do this, it's not like I'm dying. I'll stay in contact. Our buddy bond can't be broken by a little distance." Still the sharp intake of breath and stuttering exhale sent claws through Shawn's spine. Gus blinked, turning his entire buddy to the side, shoulders tense under his sweater vest. The night hair silent and broken by the teen's attempts at pride.
Shawn couldn't stay.
"I can't believe this Shawn," Voice strained, breathing hard. It was breaking point, this was where everything was going to change. Shawn could interrupt now, could gorilla glue everything together and make a joke. Get in the car that morning, sell the motorcycle he'd bought, go with his best friend. Go with the reason he didn't step off the roof those weeks ago. The only thing that would keep him above water no matter what.
Shawn couldn't stay.
"You really are going to do this?" Gus shouted, tears unashamedly glowing down his cheeks. "You're just going to-to run away? Leave me! What? Grin, make a joke, and disappear. 'Hope Gus isn't too pissed.'" His voice was high and crackling, gravely with the the way only someone who meant everything could make your throat close. He mocked Shawn's voice for the last statement, and it stung. Shawn considered getting angry, but he couldn't do it. He was hurting right now, it was late and the way his words made Gus's face transform was just food for the fire. The blonde shook his head, looking away. "Then what?"
"I just.." Shawn sighed deeply, playing with his hands before throwing them up. "I just...college isn't for me dude. It's your thing, you're the smart one-" He was cut off by an abrupt, tortured bark of laughter. Shawn glanced up to find furious brown eyes, red rimmed and shimmering, staring down at him. They were practically the same height, how could Gus stare down?
"Smart one?" High pitched, furious, broken. "Shawn I can memorize names and facts. I did my homework and I studied like crazy but..." The words slowed and Gus sighed, pulling his hands down his face. "You're the genius. I know that, everyone knows that...In the long run you're the one who's gonna make an impression. You...you can make things different and if you tried you could...be anything." Gus was practically whispering, and both boys knew what this was.
Shawn couldn't stay.
The bags were packed, but for two different places. A motorcycle was shining behind the bushes, a car was packed down the street. A dorm room ready on campus, and an apartment already filling up with a few mailed clothes across the state. The tears were falling, the words were already captured by the night air. They could not be changed, the statement could not be forgotten.
Neither of them knew what they were going to do, what it was like without the other, or how to forget the pain building inside. Neither of them knew when they'd see each other again, or if they could ever be the same. Neither of them knew how to do it, but they both knew one thing.
This was Goodbye because Shawn couldn't stay.
Shawn hated silence, and that's why he talked so much. Silence meant thinking, and thinking meant memories and it also meant he'd have to go into his own mind. There was no escaping it, he tried but his brain still buzzed with all the pain he felt, the panic, the need for control. There was an exit up ahead, an exit that would take him farther away than he intended to go.
It was inviting, empty and familiar. He could turn there, just there and he could leave again. No tears this time, no explanations, no goodbyes.
Shawn couldn't stay.
15 today.
He looked around the small get together. Gus, his father, his grandfather, his uncle, but one seat was empty. He was smiling, but even the practiced mask cracked a little when he saw that chair. The one person he wanted, desperately, to sweep through the door. The one person he really looked forward to seeing today.
Business. That's what it was every time. A call, an emergency, a client, a cop. Someone needed help, someone wanted her expertise. Someone was calling upon her today, of all days, and she answered. Because she always answered, because she always could help. Like her ex-husband she saw little things other people didn't, like her son she could put them together and solve a problem. She always saw.
Well almost always.
His father gave him a little smile, looking ridiculous with green at the corners of his mouth and a party hat on. Henry got up and squatted next to him, taking the paper plate from his sons hands. Shawn couldn't work up his usual teenage rebellious energy, and just let his father ruffle his hair and push his own party hat askew.
"Don't worry about it kid," Henry said, glancing at the chair. "She'll come tomorrow." With that the detective got up and walked to the kitchen, his partner at his side and laughing at a stupid joke his father made. Gus tossed Shawn's wrapped present at his best friend and Shawn grinned.
"Guess." Gus said, it was his favorite game.
"Two movies, a book I'll never read and," Shawn shook the box gently, squinting his eyes. "A furby? Seriously man I'm 15." Gus grinned and pouted at the same time in an entirely Burton Guster fashion.
"I swear the boys psychic." His grandfather chuckled, and his uncle grinned. Gus rolled his eyes and snatched another slice of cake before leaning back and watching his best friend go through and guess all his gifts except the one from Henry. That game was for Christmas.
Shawn pushed the paper into a giant black bag, piling the gifts up and plastering on a smile. The chair mocked him from beside Gus. He kept glancing at it as the night went on and jokes flew back and forth.
Empty. It stayed empty, just like it had on Christmas and Thanksgiving. It stayed empty. Always. Empty. Empty. Empty!
Shawn could feel an attack inching closer, his breathing becoming just that little bit shallower. Sweat on his forehead, throat sore, mind racing, leg jiggling. He was going to break. The chair was still empty. He glanced around, no one had noticed, too busy talking. He might have to explain himself in the morning, he may be grounded, he may get yelled at; but then he looked at the chair.
Shawn was on his feet so fast his head spun, everyone turned to look at him in confusion. Their eyes burned over his skin, making his fingers twitch. His father was glaring, but concerned and Gus was moving to stand also. Everyone was looking, they all were going to see, they all would know, they'd hate him for his weakness. He was pathetic, he should relax, they kept staring at him. The chair was empty.
The 15 year old ran to the stairs, but his mind was racing. Foot steps already following him, his room wasn't safe enough. He veered around, turning straight to the door. He could hear his father and his father's partner close behind. The world was moving just enough for Shawn to notice, and his skin was prickling. His stomach dropped and twisted like there was a tornado inside of it. The door handle wouldn't cooperate, footsteps getting closer. He couldn't fall apart in front of them, he'd kept it together for 15 years. Now wasn't the time to let them know.
The door finally opened and he was outside, down the stairs, over the yard and to the road. He didn't know where he was going, he didn't know how he'd get there or even if he could but the footsteps were still there and he couldn't let them catch up. Gus was fast, fast then him and he would catch up.
No! Gus couldn't find out, no way. No one could, and his lungs didn't want the air around him. Shawn's feet were vibrating with the pavement they hit, and his head was pounding. He was shaking, gasping, possibly crying, but never stopping. Twists and turns, short cuts and a few broken lawn gnomes and he hadn't heard footsteps in a long time. Yet he kept running, kept going for fear they'd catch up.
Shawn couldn't stay.
He'd passed the exit.
Though there were others ahead, other places to escape to. He could still run if he wanted, or he could go home. He could go back to psych, he could go anywhere right now. The sun was high, and hot on his leather clad back. The helmet was heavy on his head, and the handle bars were comfortable in his hands. He could go for ever on this bike, run and hide and never let anyone know.
He could disappear, and maybe everyone would hate him and maybe he'd lose all the respect of the people he cared about; but they'd never know why. He couldn't allow them to know, to think they'd failed or it was their fault. Shawn wouldn't allow them feel even an ounce of his pain, it was his. He was the weak one, he was the one who couldn't be happy. They shouldn't have to deal with it.
A thought that always lurked underneath the surface, and Shawn turned onto an exit. One that brought him back to Santa Barbara, and back to a doctor that owed him a favor.
Shawn couldn't stay.
"I know you hurt Shawn-"
"Sarah, stop." Shawn held up a hand, shaking his head. The woman before him whimpered. Her beautiful, pale face pink and wet. Big, gorgeous brown-yellow eyes staring at him. Long, brown hair naturally framing her face matted and pulled, messy and wet on her cheek. Lips bitten, hands shaking. This is why he never let people find out. "I just...I can't-"
"I know." That's why he knew part of his heart belonged to this short, odd, tantalizing woman. The woman who always had paint under her fingernails and a smile on his face, one of the first people that ever made the panther stay away. "I know you can't stay. I...I'm just going to have to settle for my paintings." She gave him her perfect little tearful smile, the same one she had worn the time she burnt his birthday cake and scorched the oven. Another pang went through his body. "Shawn ever since I spilled coffee all down your shirt," He remembered, it was a white polo. It was stained, ruined completely and he'd never get rid of it. "I knew you were someone special, but also knew you were like Blizzard in July. Rare and gone far too soon." she could've been a writer, she made art with her words like she did with her hands.
Shawn felt tears on his cheeks. He hated this, he hated goodbye. He never wanted to let her go, let go of his moon. Pure and good, bright and there to shine for everyone. Dependable, different, memorable, and loyal. She shone brighter than the circle in the sky.
Sarah deserved a sun to orbit her, not a broken super nova that would take her down with him.
"Shawn," She whispered, brown-yellow eyes looking up at him with concern. "I know I can't keep you, I know you're going to go somewhere knew but...keep me in your heart alright. Never forget that I loved you desperately, quickly, and forever." She put a small, elegant hand covered in gold and blue paint over his heart and he never wanted to let her go. "When you feel like giving up, please...Remember our year? The world needs you, it's lucky to have you." Shawn didn't want to let go, he loved her. He wanted to see her in a white dress, tripping down the aisle and giggling at him. He wanted to see her with a baby in her arms, hair tangled and up ontop of her head. Wanted to see her everyday, everynight. wanted her paintings cluttering the wall, wanted to hold her always cold hand in his to keep it warm. Wanted to see the snow in her dark hair again, and wanted to see when her hair turned gray.
He wanted so much, and he knew she wanted it to; but it could never happen. Even if they fit together like puzzle pieces, and made each other smile no matter what. He couldn't see her like this everytime he had an attack, couldn't see tears and scared eyes staring at him everytime he lost control. Couldn't put her through that.
"Of course button," He smiled sadly at her, taking the paint covered, calloused hands he loved so dearly in his. "I could never forget it. We're like Angel and Collins, I'll cover you."
"I'm not dying Shawn," She scrunched up her nose and puffed out a laugh. "And neither are you." She said sternly, glaring. He nodded. "And you're right. It doesn't matter where you go, or if we are together or not." She leaned up kissed his cheek gently, like a whispered goodbye inside a burning building. "I'll cover you." She sang softly against his skin, her voice breaking again.
"Just pay me back with one thousand kisses." He sang back, leaning down and pressing his lips to hers. They stood there, not kissing but trying to prolong what was coming. The inevitable closing of a door, his back disappearing and a motorcycle engine gliding over the morning air. Holding onto this thing they'd found, but now was slipping through their fingers. Like water cupped in their hands, the last droplets falling away. They held the last one held between them, waiting to be tipped away at last. It was always coming here, ending here, but they used to pretend it wasn't.
They couldn't play anymore, and Sarah broke away first. She gave him that smile that used to make his knees buckle, the smile that had sent him faltering the first time. That smile that still gave him butterflies. "I always wanted a 'one that got away'" Sarah whispered, matching his upbeat attitude in bad situations like she always did.
"I thought that I already had that, but.." He squeezed her hands one last time. Taking a moment to memorize how they fit in his palms, the feeling of short nails against his skin and flaking paint. Nothing would ever feel like that again. "Your the one I let get away, button." He sighed, loosening his grip and he felt her do the same. Both pulled away slowly, letting their hands fall awkwardly to the side.
"Shawn Spencer, my snowstorm." She whispered, taking her step away. The cold air that hit him felt like bullets against his skin. "I love you-"
"I love you too Sarah…"
"Sh," She scolded, smiling. "I love you and that's why I'm letting you go." He opened his mouth, words feeling like bile as they rolled up to his tongue. "No it's not because I think you'll come back. It's because I know that somewhere someone is going to be able to do this right, and help you the way you need it. Be stronger. I wish I could pull a Thor over here, but I'm afraid I'm not able to lift the hammer."
"Sarah...This isn't your fault."
"I know pineapple brains."
"Then why-"
"Because, we were made for each but only for a while,not for forever." Why did she have to be so perfect? He wanted to hold her, but he knew that it would only hurt worse to let go.
"Sarah Alvina, I'm...sorry." He said, taking his own step back. "Remember me not as the jackass who broke your heart?"
"Just that good looking guy that I never had to fake it for." She winked, and that was Sarah. That was how she left him stunned, and in love, even when he walked out the door to meet the world he'd ignored for those past 12 and a half months.
Shawn couldn't stay.
Shawn stopped outside the slightly questionable looking free clinic. Inside he could get the one escape that meant forever, the one thing that meant no one could make him feel it anymore. Inside was a doctor he'd proved wasn't a murderer, technically, and one who'd give him the pills he wanted without question.
Inside was the one way he could betray Sarah.
Shawn would stay.
"But in the end one needs more courage to live than to kill himself."
― Albert Camus