Pierce was listening to him, trying so, so hard to keep everything controlled. For once, he longed to be a teenager again, back when he was well-trained and a master at concealing what he didn’t want to show. There was something he had to say, though, something dangerous and uncomfortable and possibly very bad. It didn’t matter. Saying it was more important than keeping things easy.
“You’ve got to be kidding me,” he said, his tone sharp and frustrated. “Seriously? You don’t -- you haven’t -- you think,” he stammered, the words boiling inside of him. “Of course I want you, Dean,” he said, bluntly, exasperated eyes meeting his. “Why do you think this is so hard? If I didn’t care, if I didn’t like you, none of this would matter,” he said openly, shaking his hands a bit in the air.
“But what I want, what I feel, it’s pointless,” he said, “because there is someone else -- the timing is fucked, Dean, completely and totally fucked,” he said brazenly. “This girl, Dean -- I know you probably hate her, I would understand why, but... she’s been in my life for as long as I can really remember,” he said, his tone more quiet, more reverent. “And I always wanted... but I never thought.... I never thought that she’d be my girl,” he said simply. He met his gaze. “I can’t fuck it up with her, I just can’t. I’ll never forgive myself,” he said bluntly.
He was up then, pacing, scrubbing a hand down his face as he was overwhelmed with an array of emotions. He should be sad, probably, but all he felt was anger. Frustration, annoyance, disappointment. Why did fate bring Dean into his life and then put a wall between them? Push him away? Make him want to run and flee?Why would anything taint the pristine portrait in his mind of Zoé, their relationship, finally becoming something real and tangible? Perhaps above all, he felt guilt -- guilt for leading Dean on and guilt for even thinking of his kisses when he finally had Zoé’s.
Thinking of her, seeing her face in his mind’s eye, he was stricken. He’d fall on a blade before he let himself hurt her. “Just because I can’t be that for you -- be with you -- that doesn’t mean I want you to go,” he said, turning to him. “Please, Dean, I don’t want you to go. I’m from France, I’ve been to Paris, it’s overrated,” he said -- a white lie -- “just... fuck,” he groaned angrily, feeling useless. He was filled with fire, desperate to kick things and break things and yell at the top of his lungs. Why did this have to be such a mess?