Glowing in the Dark
xxxraquelita
Chapter Ten Previous Chapter Next Chapter Story
Give Kudos Track Story Bookmark Comment
Report

Glowing in the Dark: Chapter Ten


E - Words: 5,345 - Last Updated: Jul 11, 2012
Story: Complete - Chapters: 24/24 - Created: May 13, 2012 - Updated: Jul 11, 2012
1,353 0 5 0 0


Author's Notes: Warning for discussion of past violence.

It was two weeks before it happened. Two weeks of glorious conversations, kisses, hugs, and Kurt staying until one of them started to get tired. Two weeks of essays and readings and Blaine not playing the piano at all because he still couldn’t get himself to walk into the fine arts building. Two weeks of Santana getting progressively in a better mood, but still with not much mention of Brittany. Two weeks before Kurt called Blaine after leaving for the night, managing to get him right before he fell asleep.

“You miss me already or something?” Blaine asked playfully as he answered the phone. If there was one thing he loved, it was getting calls from Kurt while he was all curled up in bed. It was almost like Kurt was there beside him, and he really liked that thought.

“I just realized what a horrible boyfriend I am,” Kurt said with a sigh.

What?” Blaine sat up quickly.

“I haven’t even taken you on a real, actual date. If you want to break up with me, I completely understand.”

“Kurt,” Blaine groaned, sinking back down against his pillows. “You can’t just say stuff like that.”

“So what do you say? Are we done, or are you free tomorrow night and willing to give me another chance?”

“Well… I don’t know.” He chewed on his lip, grinning. “I think maybe we could work something out.”

“Then I guess I’ll pick you up tomorrow, let’s say seven?”

“Seven sounds great.”

“Wonderful. Thank you. I’ll see you then. Good night, Blaine.”

“Night, Kurt.”

* * *


It was like he was full of frantic energy all day and had no way to get rid of it. Fridays were always kind of high energy days for Blaine anyway, because it was the end of the week and he couldn’t wait for the weekend. Weekends meant sleeping in, and also more time with Kurt. Fridays also seemed to drag on longer for some reason, but that Friday was even worse. Time felt like it took forever to pass and by the time Blaine got out of his last class and headed home, he felt like he probably shouldn’t have had a second cup of coffee that morning because he was beyond jittery.

The best part of Santana being in a better mood was that Blaine could talk to her without worry of being lashed out at every time. He didn’t know exactly what had sparked the change, but he wasn’t about to question it. Her classes went later than his did on Fridays, so he just had to wait for her to get home. He felt nervous, which he knew was ridiculous because it was Kurt and he had dinner with him all the time. The whole label of ‘date’ on the night seemed so big and important. It was his first date ever, which was silly to think about considering that they were already boyfriends. Maybe they were going about things a little backwards, but it didn’t seem to bother them.

Blaine felt a tad ridiculous as he stood in front of his closet, trying to figure out what to wear. There wasn’t anything wrong with what he was wearing in the first place, but he felt like he should wear something a little extra nice. He had no idea what they were going to do or where they were going to go, but an actual real date meant he should look his best. The biggest problem was figuring out exactly what his best was. That was why he was glad when he heard the front door open. “Santana?”

“Yes?”

“Can you come in here?” Blaine fidgeted with the cuffs of his shirt as he heard her walking closer. Hopefully she was in a good mood and be helpful, as opposed to make him look horrible.

“What is it?” Her arm settled around his shoulders and she leaned up against him. “Are you thinking of going back in there? Because it’s a little late for that.” Blaine’s brow furrowed for a moment, but then he realized she meant his closet, or the closet rather, and he shook his head.

“I need help.”

“Well I could’ve told you that as soon as we met,” she drawled, but it was just idle teasing and he knew it.

“I need your help, and I need you to not be mean about it.”

“I’m not being mean,” she said, mocking offense. “Alright fine, I’ll be nice. What help do you need?”

“Kurt’s taking me on a date and I don’t know what to wear,” he mumbled, folding his arms across his stomach. “Help?”

“Oh.” Santana let her arm drop from around him, and she took a step away. He wasn’t sure if she was rethinking the whole helping-without-being-mean agreement. “Well. Is there, like, a color you were leaning toward?” He let out a breath, thankful that she was playing along for once.

“No, I just couldn’t… decide.” He waved his hands around in front of the clothes. “There are too many options and I can’t concentrate long enough to choose, and I just really want to…” be able to see what I’m wearing, his mind supplied unhelpfully, “…look nice.”

“Alright, well you’re going to look like a dork no matter what because that’s what all your clothes make you look like,” Santana started, and she moved in to rifle through the closet. “We’ll try our best though.” He almost asked her to be careful, not to mess up his organization scheme, but it was too late if she’d already started messing with it. “You trust me?”

“For some reason, yes.”

“Good.” He took a step back as she started pulling things out, walking back and forth between the closet and the bed, mumbling under her breath. Honestly, he hadn’t expected it to be so easy to get her help. He’d expected a lot of mockery, some name calling, and then probably a thing or two said about Kurt, but there was nothing. It took a few minutes, but she finally stopped. “Okay.”

“Okay?”

“Yeah, okay. I mean, you’ll look like yourself, that can’t be helped.”

“I like how I look,” Blaine said defensively. “What, um, is it?”

“Those grey pinstripe pants you never wear, a nice white shirt, a bow tie and suspenders for maximum Blaine-ness, and some absurdly patterned socks.”

“Santana…” He was shocked that she’d actually managed to put something together like what he’d been wanting.

“There’s a jacket too, it’s like burgundy or some shit, but I didn’t know if you’d want it because it’s nice out.”

“Thank you,” he said softly, reaching over for her hand. She just swatted his away.

“Whatever. I’m leaving before you start taking your clothes off.”

She pulled the door shut behind herself as she left, not quite far enough for it to latch. Blaine didn’t really care, he just sent about getting changed. Santana was prickly on her best days, normally, and not usually helpful without being rude at least part of the time. Even still, he was glad that she was his roommate. He was even gladder that she’d apparently become a pod person and managed to help him pick out clothes to wear – for going out with Kurt no less – without sniping the whole time.

It didn’t take him that long to change and that was even with double checking every button, zipper, clasp, tie, pleat, anything he could find that could possibly be twisted or done wrong. His other clothes found their way to the hamper, and he once again found himself unable to stand still. It was the anticipation that made him jittery, because the coffee had to have worn off by then for sure. Seven o’clock seemed hours away, even though he knew it wasn’t actually, and he was quickly running out of things to do in the meantime.

Santana was practically a savior in situations like that. Ever since she’d discovered his love of girl pop music, which he was fairly certain Cooper had clued her into, she created a playlist comprised of that entirely. It was all Katy Perry, Britney, Gaga, Ke$ha, Nicki Minaj, and it was always at the ready to be plugged into the sound system in the living room, cranked up to eleven and entirely fit for dancing around like idiots. He’d tried to get out of it the first time, sneak away back to his room without her noticing, but that was hard to do when it was just the two of them. Santana was a firm believer in dancing stuff out, especially when it came to too much energy being pent up inside. Once Blaine realized she wasn’t going to laugh at him in those situations, he’d realized just how much it actually did help and how it was fun. Plus Santana would sing along with him, and for some reason that made him feel less silly. Part of him thought she did it because it was something no one else would expect from him, and that made it special between them.

All he had to do was call up the stairs to her that he needed to kill some time and she’d come galloping down, pulling him into the living room and plugging in her ipod without a word, blasting the overproduced music through the whole house.

* * *


Kurt wasn’t used to driving his way to Blaine’s house. It was only a few blocks from campus, after all, and parking in uptown tended to be scarce. Considering that they weren’t staying in the nearby area for the night, however, it was necessary.

He heard the music as soon as he killed the engine of his car, car parked right in front of the house. The bass was practically shaking him as he walked up the sidewalk, but then the song switched to something much mellower and he was glad for that. He didn’t much feel like losing his hearing right before he got to see Blaine. His knuckles rapped lightly against the door, a formality more than anything since he usually didn’t bother knocking. Santana was clearly there, if the music was any indication, so he figured it would be the best idea to try.

There was no answer, just the sound of Santana singing along loudly with Rhianna, so he let himself in and then immediately stopped in the doorway. Blaine was rapping. His Blaine, his sweet adorable Blaine, who played the piano so beautifully and delicately, who was wearing wingtip shoes and suspenders and a polka dot bow tie, was rapping. Not just that but he was shockingly good at it, and Kurt was pretty sure he could give Nicki Minaj a run for her money. He looked fully in his element, too, all loose limbs and relaxed shoulders, not an ounce of stress visible in his body. It was rare to see him like that, and it was that plus the shock of it all that left Kurt standing there staring, mouth slightly agape.

It looked like something that probably happened often, based on how the two of them were trading off. Santana saw him but rather than the glare he was used to receiving from her, she just looked endlessly amused. Maybe it was because she knew just how unlaced Blaine was in that moment, the fact that Kurt had seen, and that both of them knew that Blaine would be completely embarrassed if he knew that. For the first time ever, he felt like he and Santana were on the same page about something. Maybe he was actually seeing her for more of who she actually was, though she did give him a pointed look when she came to the lyric I am not a girl who can ever be defined and then went back to acting like he wasn’t there. He was willing to bet that was her life motto.

For the first time, Kurt felt like he was seeing what it was about Santana that Blaine liked so much. At least, he could see their relationship much clearer. The way she made him loosen up and do something ridiculous, like jumping around the living room spitting out Nicki Minaj lyrics like it was second nature, every once and awhile. How she practically yelled I ain’t got no motherfucking time to spare like she knew, after time and time of trying to egg him into it, that Blaine wasn’t going to say it and she wanted to make up for his lack of swearing. How when the song started to come to an end, she looked back over at Kurt and raised an eyebrow at him, jerking her head toward the door. He blinked a few times, still taken aback, but took the step back onto the porch and quietly shut the door behind him.

Getting to see Blaine like that had pretty much been entirely because of Santana’s good graces, and they both knew he shouldn’t know Kurt had been there. A couple seconds later, once he’d regained his ability to think clearly and to form sentences, shocked out of them both from Santana acting like a semi-normal human being and then also Blaine being… Blaine, he lifted his hand and knocked again, much louder that time.

* * *


Blaine always felt awkward when he went places without Roscoe. He was so used to the comfort of him, that he wasn’t alone. More so that yes, he was blind, but he had a dog instead of a cane. It made him feel less awkward. Less obvious, maybe. Deep down he knew that no matter what, people would know. It just made him feel less obvious to himself. It had felt strange to leave the house without Roscoe, but he had Kurt and that meant that it would be okay.

“Where are we going?” he asked as Kurt drove them away from the house.

“We’re headed downtown,” Kurt said vaguely.

“Where downtown?”

“Short North.”

“That’s not narrowing it down very much, Kurt,” Blaine whined playfully, but there wasn’t much of an answer from Kurt so he just rest his head against the window.

“You don’t like surprises?”

“Is that seriously a question?”

“This isn’t like a startling you surprise, it’s a nice, fun surprise!” Blaine turned his head back toward Kurt and sighed.

“I know, I’m just kidding, I just really want to know.”

“How do you feel about candles?”

“Candles?” Blaine’s brow furrowed. “Um, they’re nice?”

“It sounds really lame, but it’s actually cool,” Kurt said quickly. “I mean, I think it is anyway.”

“What about candles? Where… exactly are you taking me?”

“We’re going to this place called the Candle Lab. You get to make your own candles. Well, you choose the fragrances and then they make the candles for you with them. They’re all natural products and soy and I’ve had a few of them since I came to the area, and they’re really good.” Kurt was still talking fast, like he wanted to get it all out before Blaine had a chance to question any of it.

“That sounds… awesome,” Blaine said, a smile spreading across his face.

“If you don’t want to, we can do something else. There’s a lot of stuff to do down there--”

“Kurt, I said it sounds awesome! I want to.” Kurt hummed in agreement and they spent the rest of the short ride with their hands intertwined on the console between them.

The Candle Lab was just a short walk from where Kurt parked the car, and it was like an instant sensory overload when they walked inside. It only lasted for a few seconds before Blaine adjusted, was able to sort out the different scents and fragrances. His hand gripped lightly against Kurt’s bicep, where he’d been holding on as they walked down the sidewalk and into the shop. Being on campus and holding hand with him was one thing, but being downtown and around so many more people was different. Blaine was trying his best not to be concerned about it. Kurt led him across the shop to a place where they could sit.

“Welcome to the fragrance bar!” Blaine slid into his seat and tilted his head up at the greeting. “How many candles did you guys want to make today?”

“One each, I think?” Kurt said, and Blaine nodded. They decided on shapes, a circle for Kurt and a square for Blaine, and then the girl working there brought over all the fragrances for them.

There were so many to choose from, over a hundred if the girl working there was to be believed. Kurt picked out his fragrances easily, clearly having known what he was getting before they’d gotten there. Blaine took a long time choosing his, trying to find the absolute perfect ones to put together. It took a while, but he finally settled on a combination of fresh linen, cologne, and soap suds. Not that he would readily admit it, but he chose those three because they reminded him most of how Kurt smelled most days. The perfect combination of clean and sweet.

“Alright, we’ve got a little bit of a wait to pour these, so it’ll probably be an hour or so until they’re ready,” she said, taking their fragrance choices from them. “We’ll put the labels on for you, and all you have to do is come pick them up in a bit!”

“Sounds perfect,” Kurt said, leaning over to nudge Blaine’s shoulder. “We can grab some dinner while we wait.”

There were so many restaurants in the Short North, and Blaine was glad that Kurt had decided on one before they got there so he didn’t have to make the choice himself. Betty’s was barely a block away, and they had some of the best wraps and burgers that Blaine had ever known. Cooper had taken him there before, and always commented about how the walls were covered with pictures of pin-ups and it was too bad that Blaine couldn’t see to enjoy it. It wasn’t late enough for it to be busy, which made it nice and not too loud. Once they ordered, he reached across the table and Kurt slipped their hands together.

“Thank you, Kurt,” he said, squeezing his hand.

“For what?”

“For... candles.” He wasn’t sure if Kurt had picked it for any particular reason, but Blaine was grateful for the fact that their outing had been an experience that hadn’t required any kind of visuals to enjoy. For once, he hadn’t felt like he was missing out on part of something.

“Oh, you’re welcome,” Kurt said, sounding pleased. “I was hoping you’d like that. They have ones you can just buy outright, but I think it’s more fun to make your own.”

“No, that was fun,” Blaine said with a nod. “There were just so many options; I think I could make so many candles given the opportunity. Santana would go nuts.”

“So what you’re saying is that we should go back a lot,” Kurt said with a chuckle.

“Definitely.” Blaine chewed on his lip for a moment, grinning. “This is my first date ever and it’s kind of setting a high bar for anything that follows, I think you should know.”

“I’m going to tentatively say that I’m up to the challenge.”

“Well good, I’d hate to have to be disappointed from now on.” Kurt laughed, and let go of his hand as the food got to the table. They ate in silence, and the restaurant only got louder and more crowded as they did.

Weekends downtown tended to get started a little later, but once they did they were in full swing. By the time they were done eating and ready to head back to the Candle Lab, the place was packed. Getting out of Betty’s was a challenge, and Blaine hated stuff like that. There were a few more tables than there should have been, and people waiting for them to open up crowded it even more, which made it impossible to get out without having to push through them all. It made him anxious, but at least Kurt seemed to get that.

“I feel like they were breaking some kind of fire code,” Kurt said under his breath once they were outside, still holding onto Blaine’s hand as tight as he had been to get them through the crowd.

“Very possibly,” Blaine replied, taking his hand back and lightly resting it on the crook of Kurt’s arm as they headed back down the block to the other shop. It seemed as though in the time they’d been eating dinner, the entire area had filled up with people. The sidewalks were more difficult to navigate without bumping into people constantly, and that made him want to hold onto Kurt tighter and completely let go all at the same time. It wasn’t until Kurt leaned over and pressed a kiss against his temple that he actually pulled away. He winced, mostly because he hadn’t meant to and also because he felt like a jerk for it. “Sorry…”

“It’s… okay.” Kurt sounded hesitant, and he held open the door to let Blaine back into the Candle Lab.

They didn’t talk about it at all as they got their candles, and Blaine couldn’t help but admit that his smelled amazing and perfect – just like Kurt. They didn’t talk about it as they made their way back to the car or on the ride back to Blaine’s place. The car was fairly quiet, save for the radio playing softly in the background. Blaine just sat stewing in his thoughts, trying not to overreact like normal. It was a little late for that, but he was trying to keep it from getting worse.

He wasn’t sure how to explain it to Kurt without saying everything, and that was a terrifying thought. Secrets weren’t exactly his thing, but there was one big one that he kept to himself unless he could help it. Kurt deserved to know, though. There was no reason to keep it from him, and maybe it would make it seem less bad when Blaine had his moments of complete irrationality. It took a lot of psyching up to get him to even consider breaching the topic and that was why he spent the entire car ride with his hands clasped, occasionally squeezing together to the point of near painful. By the time they pulled up to his house, he had talked himself in and out of it enough times to lose count.

“Well…”

“Will you come in?” Blaine interrupted, flushing slightly but probably not that noticeably in the dark. “Please?”

“Of course,” Kurt said, sounding surprised but not hesitating at all. He cut the engine and pocketed the keys as they got out and made their way up to the house, going in and straight back to Blaine’s room. Santana seemed to be gone, which was good despite how she’d been earlier that evening. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” Blaine said automatically, but then he shook his head. “No, that’s… not true.”

“What’s wrong?” They both sunk down onto the edge of the bed and Blaine swallowed, trying to find the words he’d been playing over and over in his head in the car.

“I’m sorry I did that, before, I didn’t mean to,” he started quietly, rubbing his thumb hard against the palm of his hand. “I feel like a really big jerk.”

“Blaine, you’re not--”

“I feel like one,” he interjected. “I hate that I do stuff like that and I don’t even mean to. Kurt, you make me feel amazing and I just… suck sometimes.”

“No you don’t,” Kurt said gently, his arm slipping around Blaine’s shoulders.

“I’m trying to figure out how to tell you why that happens,” he murmured, biting at the inside of his lip as he paused. “It’s kind of hard.”

“You don’t have to tell me if you don’t want, it’s fine, Blaine.”

“It’s not fine,” Blaine said evenly, shaking his head. “It’s not, Kurt. I know I don’t have to tell you but I… I want to.”

“Okay,” Kurt said, thumb rubbing against Blaine’s shoulder as they sat in silence for a few seconds. “You can tell me whatever you want, no rush. I can sit here all night and be fine.”

“Okay, so... remember how I said before that I went to a school dance with a friend once?” Blaine felt like all his insides were twisting up together as he started to speak, and he had barely said anything. He never talked about it – not to his parents, Cooper, Santana, anyone. Starting with the less difficult part, maybe that would make it easier.

“Mhm.”

“It was my friend Danny. He was the only other guy I knew who was out.” His fingernails dug into his palm, and Kurt kept rubbing at his shoulder. “It was the Sadie Hawkins dance. I asked him to go, just as friends. I wanted to go and it wasn’t like any girl was going to ask me because, well, obviously… and I couldn’t exactly ask them because that kind of defeated the purpose of it being Sadie Hawkins.” He took in a breath, letting it out slowly before continuing. “But we went. I mean, I don’t remember much of the actual dance except I remember having fun. It was nice to be able to be there with him, be able to dance with him.

“We weren’t being ridiculous or anything. It’s not like we were dancing like, um, you and I did. Not that it was ridiculous when we did that,” he added quickly, shaking his head. “Just, I mean, we were being careful. We weren’t stupid, we knew that there were people that wouldn’t like… us. I didn’t get picked on a whole lot in school but Danny did. I blended in a little better, I think? That sounds horrible to say, but it’s… looking back, it’s true.”

Kurt hummed softly beside him. It was so quiet, like a reminder that he was still there and listening.

“They were waiting for us in the parking lot,” Blaine whispered, finally getting to the part of the story he never wanted to say out loud. Kurt’s hand tightened on his shoulder. “After the dance. We were headed to Danny’s car, holding hands, and they just… jumped us. I don’t remember much about it, just that everything hurt and there was so much yelling. I… sometimes, I can still hear what they said, all those horrible words…” He shook his head, swallowing hard. His chest and throat felt so tight, but he didn’t want to cry. “I’d barely gotten called any of those things before, then all at once…”

“Blaine…” Kurt’s voice was quiet, soothing almost, but it wasn’t much help considering. He couldn’t stop now that he started, and he didn’t want to.

“I remember curling up, trying to make myself small like maybe that would help.” He forced his hands apart, feeling like he might actually draw blood if he kept digging into his palms like he had been. Talking about it made it feel like it was happening all over again. The fear that had taken over. The way Danny had screamed in pain. How he had screamed. “It didn’t.”

Tears streaked down his cheeks despite his best effort to keep them in. He swiped at them with the back of his hand. “I don’t remember… it just hurt. It hurt more than anything I’d ever felt and then it stopped. I woke up in the hospital after a week in a coma. My mom said they weren’t sure if I was going to wake up. So I guess… not being able to see anymore wasn’t that bad compared to dying.”

Kurt seemed to hesitate, unsure if Blaine was okay with being touched just then, but then his arms were wrapping around him and pulling him in close. They sat in silence, Blaine occasionally brushing tears from his face as soon as they fell, and Kurt held him tight. He felt like he was going to burst and the only thing keeping him from that was Kurt, solid and warm there beside him and making him feel safe against all the memories flashing back and making him relive the worst day of his life.

“That’s why,” Blaine mumbled eventually, trying to reel himself back in. “Pretty much for all of it. Why I don’t like being surprised, being around a lot of people, when it gets loud and stuff… it kind of just, hits me. And I feel bad about earlier because I like when you kiss me, I just couldn’t… there were so many people and…” It made him feel worse to try and explain it, feeling like it sounded as if he were somehow ashamed and wanted to hide, but that wasn’t it at all. He could still hear the jeers, the hate spit out at him just from daring to hold hands with his friend.

“Don’t feel bad.” Kurt’s voice sounded tight, full of emotion. Blaine swallowed hard and made himself nod, despite the fact that he knew he was going to keep on feeling bad and that was something he couldn’t help. “God, Blaine, don’t you dare feel bad.” He paused, pressing a kiss against Blaine’s temple like he had earlier in the evening, but it was lingering and damp. Blaine realized belatedly that Kurt had been crying too. “I would never want to make you uncomfortable. We don’t have to, in front of anyone, hold hands, any of that. Not if you don’t want.”

“It’s not… it’s not that,” Blaine said, shaking his head. “I don’t want to be scared of any of it. I like being able to do that stuff with you, it’s just that sometimes it… I can’t, and I don’t want you to think it’s because I don’t want to.”

“It’s okay. It’s…I totally understand.”

“Will you stay?” Blaine asked meekly before he could talk himself out of it. He felt drained, emotionally
and physically. He’d been tense, so wound up, and he hated the thought of Kurt leaving for the night. “Sorry, that was… you don’t have to, it’s fine.”

“No, I want to,” Kurt cut in, and Blaine let out a breath. “As long as I can borrow something to sleep in.”

Blaine got them both pajamas to wear, and changed in the bathroom so Kurt could have his room. He wasn’t even thinking when he washed out his hair – it was just something he did every night before bed. Sleeping with all that gel in made for a headache in the morning, so he always got it out before crawling into bed. It wasn’t until he knocked on the door to his room lightly and got the okay from Kurt to come in, not like he would have been able to see anything if he’d been mid-change anyway, that he realized what he’d done. It was the soft, startled sound that Kurt made that clued him in.

“Oh God, this is horrible,” Blaine groaned, hands immediately flying up to his hair and attempting to smooth it down. Thankfully it was still damp and therefore not nearly as crazy as it could have been. “Please pretend like you can’t see how awful it looks.”

“Absolutely not,” Kurt said, tugging his hands away from his hair and guiding him over to the bed.

As they lay there, both on their sides and facing in, breath playing across each other’s skin as they were barely inches away, Blaine realized it was the most exposed he’d ever let himself be with someone. He felt completely stripped down to the core, all his cards out on the table – crazy hair included. It seemed like such a small thing compared to telling Kurt about what had happened before, but it was just as much a secret he kept solely to himself.

Their hands were linked together between them, and Kurt’s other arm was angled up across the pillows so he could run his fingers through Blaine’s hair. If that was going to be what happened every time his hair was gel-free, Blaine thought he might be able to let himself go every so often. It was soothing, gentle, and that small gesture was enough to cause the tension he’d been holding in his body to melt away. It felt so right to be there in that moment with him, and the lazy strokes of Kurt’s fingertips against his scalp lulled him to sleep.

 

 

End Notes: For anyone who is curious: The Candle Lab // Betty's

Comments

You must be logged in to add a comment. Log in here.

A gorgeous chapter. I was hoping to see Blaine exploring Kurt's body, feeling how Kurt looks.

Oh God, poor Blaine! I'd had my theories that his loss of sight might have come as a result of the Sadie Hawkins dance but I didn't really want to believe it :( fabulous chapter, I loved their date and it's nice to see this side of Santana too :)

I just discovered this story, and have been completely sucked in! I love the way in which we see everything through Blaine, even though he can't actually see at all. It's beautifully done, and I am really, really enjoying it. I truly look forward to more,

I absolutely adore this story! Santana's kind of mean but otherwise, this is just wonderful!