Ezra Bridger (
jabbathehutt) wrote2021-05-17 08:40 am
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Mist under the East River
No one even noticed what happened to the kids on Delancey. Or never talked about it, which amounted to the same thing.
The papers covered the accident that took the life of three construction workers on the Manhattan side of what will eventually become the second East River Bridge. They said digging hit an underground cave they didn't know was there, and the families were compensated widely.
No one talked about the handful of street kids who had taken to using the site as shelter at night. Who had, due to dares and a morbid curiosity, snuck into the site to find - not an underground cave but a secret basement. And this is because no one survived to talk about it afterwards.
Except Ezra Bridger. Who never does talk about it.
In fact, most people have probably forgotten he was even friends with those kids.
Now he sells papes and lives by his wits on the Lower East Side, tries to avoid making any more friends, and keeps himself to himself.
Well, as much as that's possible among the ragged army of New York City newsboys.
The papers covered the accident that took the life of three construction workers on the Manhattan side of what will eventually become the second East River Bridge. They said digging hit an underground cave they didn't know was there, and the families were compensated widely.
No one talked about the handful of street kids who had taken to using the site as shelter at night. Who had, due to dares and a morbid curiosity, snuck into the site to find - not an underground cave but a secret basement. And this is because no one survived to talk about it afterwards.
Except Ezra Bridger. Who never does talk about it.
In fact, most people have probably forgotten he was even friends with those kids.
Now he sells papes and lives by his wits on the Lower East Side, tries to avoid making any more friends, and keeps himself to himself.
Well, as much as that's possible among the ragged army of New York City newsboys.
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"Hey, Spot, how's it going?"
He's here, which means he hasn't been prevented from coming down, and Ezra would have heard if he had gone missing, but he's still curious - did it work?
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The greeting earns him a couple of looks - most of the Manhattan boys know how Ezra usually keeps to himself, so the fact he's apparently on friendly terms with Spot is a surprise, and a lot of the Brooklyn boys are interested because they don't know who he is. There's definitely some speculation that maybe he's just stupid - until Spot gives him an easy nod.
"Ezra," he greets casually "Going good. You?"
Translation: It worked, and did you need something.
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But now he's standing awkwardly with his hands in his pockets, hoping the rest will get on with their swimming.
"Good."
He doesn't need anything, thanks for asking.
"Not swimming? Water looks good."
Do you have to be home?
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Most of them lose interest, the water is good and Spot and Ezra's conversation isn't exactly thrilling, but there's still one or two boys listening in.
"Not interested in sitting around waiting to dry, would rather just enjoy the weather."
They'd notice if I came home damp, but I don't need to rush off.
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Trying to get fish to respond to him proves futile, so when he's had a good soak, and avoids getting into swimming races, he pulls himself out again and flops wetly down near Spot, basking in the sunlight.
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Spot's content to lounge on the pier and just watch the fun - mostly. He does wish he could just forget everything and join, but there's too much at stake.
He glances over when Ezra drops next to him - the rest of the boys have lost interest by now, off having their own fun, so it's a little safer to talk as long as they keep it quiet.
"Good swim?"
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"Water's nice though. Shame you're missing out."
Maybe Spot will have a nice bath later though. In a porcelain tub.
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Spot just shrugs.
"Maybe another day." it's his usual reply, but he almost never does - there's a rumour among some of the boys that Spot can't swim, but none of them dare say it where he can hear.
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He closes his eyes, listens to the noise of the kids around them, and tries to figure out if he can tell if anyone's listening.
He can't. Or no one's listening, but he doesn't know which.
"It worked, then? Er, no harm done?"
He'd probably feel bad if the asshole had lost his mind. Probably.
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Spot shifts position, ostensibly to get more comfortable but using it as an excuse to glance around and make sure nobody was too close before he answers.
"Seems that way," he agreed "He didn't mention it at all when I got home."
He'd gotten in trouble later that week for some other infraction, but there'd been no mention of him running around dressed as a newsie, and no indication of a closer eye on him or anything else he might have expected in way of consequences from his father.
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"I mean, I figure he'd deserve it, but I ain't never done that before. Don't want to hurt people I don't intend to."
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You have no idea
But he doesn't say it out loud. He's not about to air his private life to someone he only just met, however much Ezra saved him. Besides, he's probably got a good enough idea, he saw what his father was like in the alley.
"He seems fine. His usual self."
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He nods, and continues to sit quietly, basking in the feeling of the kids around them. It's nice to be surrounded by this much fun - feels good.
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"How long you been able to do it?" Spot asks after a moment of comfortable silence, not quite looking at Ezra - his tone is quiet enough not to be overheard, but he's still careful not to say anything too obvious.
He doesn't mind if Ezra doesn't want to answer, but he's curious.
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"About a year," Ezra says. "Took me a while to figure out how to work it though."
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So it's not something he was born with, it was something that happened to him... that's interesting.
"What happened?" he asks, though he knows he's far less likely to get an answer this time.
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Ezra shakes his head, still looking upwards and not any less relaxed.
"That ain't your business. Sorry."
Translation: it was traumatic as fuck and he doesn't want to relive it right now and ruin the mood.
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Spot shrugs easily, accepting his answer.
"Fair enough." he's not going to push Ezra to talk if he doesn't want to - and yea, okay, it's at least partially because he knows that if he pushes too hard, Ezra could very well push him to talk about other things, in front of people, and Spot wouldn't really be able to say no. He doesn't think Ezra would, he just knows he could.
"You like being a newsie?" he asks, changing the subject.
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Which is what he used to be, before he learned to sell. Still is, if he doesn't make enough to eat in a day, but that doesn't happen as much.
He lifts his head to look directly at Spot.
"Do you?"
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"Yes." Spot says simply - of course he does, unlike most of the kids here he's doing this entirely by choice, he could stop tomorrow if he wanted.
"The days are long sometimes, especially when the weather's bad, but it's.. for me, it's a kind of freedom."
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Ezra wants to challenge that, to point out that it's not the same kind of freedom for Spot as it is for the newsies selling papes to keep themselves out of the refuge, but he stays that comment. Because he knows that Spot's got something to be free from, and maybe this is alright.
"How long have you been selling papes for?"
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Spot wouldn't have thanked him for it - he knows, he deals with the guilt of it every day, the knowledge that he's really just playing. It's why he works so hard as Brooklyn leader, why he makes sure every penny he makes goes into helping the boys, since he doesn't need it himself. He still knows he could do more, though.
"5, 6 years now?" he estimates.
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It also means that Ezra's been doing this longer than Spot. Not that it's surprising they didn't know each other - there are a lot of newsies in New York, and Ezra keeps himself to himself.
"Why did you start?"
Enjoying it is one thing, but he can't fathom just getting up and trying it one day.
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"I was... lonely..." Spot admits - he's never told anybody about this before, but then nobody's ever known to ask "I saw the boys at the gate laughing and joking with each other and they looked like they were having fun... I learned there was more to it than that, obviously, but by then I was already hooked."
He wonders how much Ezra is judging him, whether he thinks he's just some spoiled brat playing pretend. Maybe he is, but he's happy with the life he's found for himself.
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He nods. He can understand that, maybe. There's a camaraderie in selling papes that he liked - until a year ago.
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