An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 3/?
Fandom: Torchwood
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Jack Harkness/Ianto Jones, Gwen Cooper & Jack Harkness & Owen Harper & Ianto Jones & Toshiko Sato
Characters: Ianto Jones, Jack Harkness, Gwen Cooper, Toshiko Sato, Owen Harper, John Hart, Original Characters
Additional Tags: outsider pov, Post-Episode: s01e08 They Keep Killing Suzie, Post-Episode: s01e13 End of Days, Episode: s02e01 Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Coffee Shops, Unrequited Crush, Everyone Loves Ianto Jones & Theyâre So Fucking Valid, Ianto Jones & Suzie Costello mutual suspicion, An unfortunate amount of retcon, John Hart is a feral bastard, Episodic fic because Iâm a long winded bitch, So fucking much coffee, Mutual Pining, Janto get your shit together challenge
Summary:Â
An outsider POV of the local barista who works in a shop on the Plass, watching Torchwood shenanigans, overhearing too much, and crushing unashamedly on one Mr. Ianto Jones.
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Ooooh for the TW ask Iâm going to be greedy and ask three: 2, 8, 16! Canât wait to hear your thoughts!
2. best episode or piece of extended material that you think is underrated?
the torchwood one box sets. all of them. there is just something so special about ianto while he was at torchwood one. i mean, heâs always special. there is a reason heâs the fan-favourite. but, the torchwood one audios really show why he DESERVES to be. this is ianto before the universe broke him. yes, he has his shit childhood in his past, but he got away from it and works in canary wharf where their office is a skyscraper and he takes the monorail to work. itâs cool and he gets to live this action hero life that he never thought he could-- well sort of. itâs him being yvonne hartmanâs right hand man and weâre shown exactly who ianto is as a man. he is kind and empathetic and optimistic. he sees the best in people and wants to do good, even if he sees that his boss may not have the best interest of people at heart. heâs described as THE FUTURE OF TORCHWOOD and yvonneâs conscience. he is openly nerdy and gives pep-talks to people who are doubting themselves and going through hard times. he is a sharp shot and proves his worth in the field.Â
torchwood one shows ianto jones as his true self and itâs so sad that not many people got to meet this ianto jones after the fall. jack gets a glimpse into the person ianto was, in private [ serenity comes to mind even though he is still cynical at this point ] everyone who loves ianto should really buy those audios, itâs worth it and i can never thank big finish enough for what they gave us when they gave us torchwood one ianto.
8. do you have a favourite quote?Â
â then i take it all back, but not HIM â yes, this quote is heartbreaking, but itâs what the quote implies that makes it one of my favourites. the 456 is killing everyone in the building, including ianto, and jack begs them to spare ianto. the alien says â you said you would fight â and this is what jack answers with. he offers to give up and let the alien win, he offers to sacrifice everything if only ianto could live. jack harkness, who handed a little girl over to aliens in front of her mother because sometimes you have to sacrifice one to save the many. he was shown even earlier in coe to sacrifice few for the many. itâs what he does. jack makes the hard decisions. until the one time he wants to be selfish. until he loves someone so desperately that he offers the world to save him. sometimes people question jackâs feelings for ianto and sometimes the relationship is described as one-sided. but this ONE line proves that jack harkness loved ianto jones with a terrifying [ to him ] ferocity.
16. is there a plot line you wish had been expanded on/explored further in the show?
toshâs entire life. the show did her so fucking dirty and made her all about her love interests. they had the most brilliant person on planet earth and did nothing with her. she deserved plotlines that were solely her being the genius she is. she deserved story arcs in general.Â
Other notes: this was written for @spacepandar for the 2017 Secret Santa event. Also itâs a one-shot and a quick read!
What I love about it:
The prose in this is absolutely gorgeous. Yavemiel uses repetition to set each scene, emphasizing what Jyn and Cassianâs post-war life looks like and connecting each snapshot as part of a whole.
It starts with pure bliss as Cassian and Jyn are reunited after the war. You can just feel Jynâs tension and excitement to meet Cassian bleeding through the words until she finally spots him. Iâm rereading this to write this, and Iâm still blown away by how delightful and emotional her writing is. AHHH I love it!
The fic goes on to provide little slices-of-life after the war. We get five total scenes, which, by the way, are inspired by beautiful fan art by the awesome spacepandar. (What a bonus to the writing and a fitting tie-in!) Each scene captures a different feel for what life might be like â from happy moments like that initial excitement at the end of the war and uncontrolled hilarity as Jyn and Cassian finally get a good laugh* to slightly more difficult moments like trying to figure what the heck to do with their time and the uneasy anticipation that their happy ending wonât last and war looms on the horizon. (*I just love Cassian having the freedom and ease to truly laugh; heâs so stoic and barely smiles in the movie so that scene is a gift.)
Thereâs fluff and thereâs that recognition that it might not always be easy, newfound peace, but they have each other and that is enough. Yavemiel crafts absolutely sweet fluff with beautiful language. I truly adore this fic.Â
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Massive massive congratulations on your new assignment/promotion, it sounds like an amazing job! I hope you had a good night last night, thanks for all the amazing fic snippets (which were a delight to wake up to this morning), and I hope your head doesnât feel the vodka too much when you wake up! đ
Thank you! I didnât really have anyone else to celebrate with last night (my spouse is off on a Temporary Additional Duty, which is like the military version of a business trip), so it was just me and my internet buddies, and since everyone sent me such awesome prompts I only drank a little bit. So Iâm feeling pretty chipper today, actually! And hey, Iâm really glad you liked the random story bits I threw out there. I know they are rough and full of typos but eh, itâs been fun!
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@yavemiel and @ruby-red-inky-blue thanks for having faith in me hahahhaha!!! I'm afraid I can't remember though sorry, did either of you guys have a country you wanted to write or not? đ
The street is dark, and she is walking into the dark; he isnât quite sure where the borders of the darkness lie, in the pools of streetlight or in himself.  His eyes arenât working quite right anymore, and he clings on to the last sweet thing he will see, clings to the sight of her walking, as his brain clings to the last sweet thing it will know, the memory (remember me remember me) the memory of her body her lips the sadness in her eyesâŠ
The blood running down his hip and pooling in the plastic seat is sickly, stickily hot and he is beginning to feel numb inside, the pain putting itself at a distance from him.
The street is dark, and Aurora walks into the dark, and he goes into the dark watching her.
**
Dark indeed, long dark, long like a bad childhood, like a fever, like fear...
He can feel something in the darkness. Â A surface under his fingertips. Â He touches it. Â Firm. Not hard but firm. Â Neither warm nor cold. Â Motionless; not something alive. Â When he moves his hand, curls his fingers, his nails find a faint texture beneath them. Â Roughness, very delicate, structured, something interwoven, woven. Â Fabric.
He canât open his eyes, because dead men do not see. Â Then he does; and sees nothing. Â Lies in the dark, remembering with a brilliant vividness the young woman walking away from him, her straight back, swinging hips, sweet beauty going into the dark. Â Heâs there now in the depths of darkness and it still isnât over. Â He wonders how long it truly takes to die.
His breathing seems to be quite steady, and the pain has vanished. Â So thereâs that at least. Â Interesting to know. Â Dying, in these final stages; not painful.
He wonders if all the men heâs killed had a split second of this stillness in them, this quiet, troubled peace, before their shot hearts stopped.
On his left thereâs something that isnât darkness. Â It looks, weirdly, like the outline of a door, with a light behind it.
Gabriel would laugh if he had the strength or the breath left for it. Â The door to heaven, right there, shut in his face. Â Fair enough. Â Itâs hardly a surprise to learn he didnât do enough to merit redemption. Even now, even from here on the wrong side, the light beyond the door is strangely beautiful. Â Thin lines like the angelsâ lances, violent unearthly light of paradise, cutting through the endless night. Â Even if he didnât make it, then, heaven does exist.
Curious how comforting that is. Â Itâs not for him, but it is there, for others. Â Blessed Mother of God and the words float up into his mind and he canât remember the next line but even the start of the prayer sounds sweet Blessed Mother of God
Blessed Mother of God
Is this my consolation?
If this is all, I am content
Darkness
**
The next time he wakes, he sees a regular door, and daylight; and heâs in a small grey room, in a bed, with a pillow beneath his head. Â Things bleep.
His left side and his hand both hurt. Â He has no idea why his hand hurts.
It isnât until a nurse comes in, and he tries to say âWhat happened?â and cannot speak that he realises heâs been intubated. Â One of the beeping machines is helping him to keep breathing.
Itâs really true, then. Heâs alive.
âAh, good morning,â says the nurse when his desperate eyes meet hers. Â âGood, good.â Â He blinks at her. Â She nods her head though she cannot possibly know what heâs trying to say; checks the machinery, leaves him alone again. Â He lies looking up, staring at the reality of not being dead.
Later, for the rest of the day, doctors and other nurses come and go, and in between their visits he stares up and sees the plaster panels overhead, the support struts, the light fitting with the plain fabric shade. In his hearing all they will say is courteous, neutral, encouraging things, like relax, you need to rest and it was touch and go for a while there but youâll pull through and excellent, normal blood pressure.
Someone must have called an ambulance. Â The man behind the counter, perhaps. Â How wonderful after all his dark deeds to owe his life to some ordinary act of compassion, a little man at a diner counter making a telephone call.
âSo, young Archangel, youâre still with us, then. Â You have a little breathing space. Â Time to think things through, eh? - make that decision we talked about.â
She doesnât stay long, and doesnât tell him anything about the rest of them. Â Thatâs bad, he thinks, with a coldness settling in his chest alongside the pain that seems to live there now. Â It could mean many things, and none of them are good.
They take the breathing tube out two days later. Â He wonders what to ask, now that heâll be able to speak again. Â Outside this little grey room, he has no idea of the shape of the world anymore. Â No idea even of who is living and who is dead. Â All he knows is that he should have been among the latter, and somehow he is not.
The doctor supervising the extubation asks him a couple of pointless questions, inspects his stitches, listens to his chest and abdomen, congratulates him on being alive; leaves.  The nurses renew the dressing on his wound, check his catheter  and the drip in his arm, give him sips of water from a cup like a babyâs beaker and promise him a first taste of solid food that evening.  Soup, they say, as though it were manna.  It sounds like manna.  Chicken soup with vegetables.
Itâs then that he decides to ask one question; the only one he has some hope will be safe. Â His voice sounds like sawdust. Â âPlease, who called the ambulance?â Â
âSeñor?â
âHow did I get here? â the guy in the diner, did he call an ambulance, was it him? Â Iâd like to thank him, when I get out.â Â
Saying that much has made everything hurt, and the nearer of the two nurses touches his hand gently.  âI donât know, Señor, but I can find out for you. Would you like that?  Now you need to rest, youâve had a tiring day.â
Strange to be petted, so, and spoken to like that; as though heâs a sick five-year-old, not a grown man and a murderer. Â
He nods, whispers a thank you, accepting her authority and her kindness. Â Stares up at the ceiling when the two of them leave, and is asleep within minutes.
**
âI found out the answer, Señor.  To your question.  I checked the records and apparently it was an anonymous caller.  A young woman, calling from a cell-phone.â
Blessed Mother of God, is this my consolation?  If this is to be all, I am content.  I remembered her, and she did not forget me.  Holy Mary, Mother of God, thank you, thank youâŠ
âItâs nice to see a patient smile like that,â one nurse is saying to the other as they leave the room. âHe looks happy to be alive for the first time.â
**
Doña Cecelia comes again the next day, and the rest of his questions are answered; and after that conversation, he lies shaking and unable to sleep, long into the night, in the darkness.
He hangs on to the handles in the tiled wall with shaking arms, looks straight ahead, refuses to acknowledge the humiliation. Â Thanks the nurse afterwards.
The mirror had steamed up within moments. Â Heâd had enough of the view anyway. Â Always lean, heâs now painfully thin; cheekbones jutting, muscles wasted and slack. Â Yet his beard has grown well. Â He looks like a revolutionary out of a kidsâ history book; gaunt and angry, savage-eyed, and superbly moustachioed.
The scar on his abdomen is huge; easily four times the length heâd anticipated when he first felt the wound. Â Where the knife went in thereâs a ragged three centimetre slash but thatâs just the start; it extends above and off to the side now, neat surgical incisions. Â Its whole length sutured up with stitches black as boarsâ bristles, delicate as lace. Â
It itches and aches, and it feels as though every organ inside hurts too, despite the analgesia. Â
The cannula in his hand itches too, and the skin under the tape holding it down is inflamed. Â It wonât be taken out for another three to four days. Â Theyâre still pumping antibiotics into him through it. Â The consultant tells him smoothly that he should focus on making a good recovery instead of grumbling about a few square centimetres of rash. Partial splenectomy, traumatic injury to the large and small intestines and the left lobe of the liver, a punctured lung, and massive blood loss; plus a chip out of the anterior end of one rib. He had to ask for explanations of some of the medical terms, but now he knows, heâll remember.
âI should hope not! That isnât what Iâm paying good money for. Â Youâd be back in this place, in the morgue, within a week, the way things are at present. Why do you think I have a man stationed outside here right now, eh? Â The business has as good as collapsed anyway. Â But the properties he owned, those still have solid value. Â Think about it; make up your mind what to do, and then do it. Â Action has a magic of its own. Â Didnât some poet say that? Â So act.â
âI will, Doña Cecelia. I know what Iâm going to do.â
She smiles at that. Â âTell a lady your plans? Â Iâd like to think of you going out from here soon and finding yourself a life that wonât kill you. Â What are you off to do, then?â
Gabriel smiles, slowly, letting himself hope for the first time he can remember. âIâm going to Spain.â