empty caverns of inky blackness; cigarette slipped between your lips, inhale tar ; wine dark and debauched ; a bare light bulb hanging in a room ; cities disappearing on the skyline ; the inbetweens before falling asleep ; STAINED-GLASS WINDOW SHEDDING PURPLE BEAMS. ink stained fingers, red from marking in the fragrant morning hours ; forgetting your own name ; sculpted clay clinging to fingertips ; DISSOLVES IN THE RAPTURES OF A BOTTOMLESS MEMORY
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
flashback, america, 2002 .
RHYS .
                            balanced there, suicides sometimes meet,                            raging at the fruit, a pumped-up moon,                            leaving the bread they mistook for a kiss,
                           leaving the page of the book carelessly open,                            something unsaid, the phone off the hook                            and the love, whatever it was, an infection.
(flashback, america, 2002 + @oblvvicnâ )
twenty-six years old and living off american dollars for a year now, learning the smell of pastels and the colour of t.s. eliotâs pieces in the morning. twenty-six years old and living away from the land that shaped him, molded his white skin as if another work of phidias. twenty-six, and learning how to unlearn himself.
this whole thing was not supposed to happen.
a distraction, that was it. for him and for the world, as the kingsbury name would get dragged into the mud, implications heavy and dangerous after his fatherâs funeral. grieve, they told him to lie. a mask would suffice for the prying eyes, to hide away the rotten work of a vengeful son. so be it, rhys had nodded, and the seas took him. the shores had brought him here, a year later, in nathanielâs apartment.
learning, and yearning; this softness that took root in his heart with a dangerous hunger.
the letter, a tad wet from his previous walk, was not trembling in his hand. it was still, even though its content was stirring unease inside of rhys. unease at what? returning home? leaving america, and all of its dangerous fruit? there, sitting on the edge of nathanielâs bed, was a young man who never had to look at his own vulnerability, never had to admit to have one. men who killed in cold blood, satisfaction boiling low in their gut after the act, men like these did not deserve the hopeful what ifs. the what ifs that came with the letterâs implications.
europe in his veins, calling him back to the motherland.
stolen away from his thoughts, rhysâ attention was suddenly to the door, its usual creaking announcing the presence of nathaniel. delicately closing the letter, placing it back in its guarding enveloppe (took a time to gently let his thumb caress the two lions insignia adorning its front, symbol of success, getting back on the top chain) getting on his feet swiftly, rhys met the young man in the middle of the kitchen. âhey,â shoulder on door frame, he took in the sight of him. broad shoulders, flopping hair, wet from the pouring storm outside. advancing calmly, his fingers helping the jacket to come off, brushing against the sensitive skin of nathanielâs neck. he held the dripping jacket away from them, pressing a fleeting kiss to the other manâs shoulder. âyouâre late.â
not that rhys cared much, glad to put an end on those horrendous thoughts. âhow was your day?â voice low, following the overall mood of the weather, rhys knew that nathaniel would think he just woken up. maybe he would like this alternative better.
Skies foreboding grey, suffocating any sign of the sun that rested behind the dense clouds so full of sorrow. A boy too aged in his expressions, dashed through the rain, the budding glow lamps that lit the streets. He was Nathaniel here. But that name claimed him for years now. Settling into the name like a crescent moon, it gave shape to the still too young man. All the documents said he was twenty five, heâd let these things ring true until they were. Nathaniel was good at that, at repeating things enough times that even he himself could begin to believe them. Tendrils of lies shaping him into something that can forget the shadows that cling to his shoulders, and lurk in his bones.Â
âYou look like the sky, Rhys.â It was easy to look at the bot before him and see not the cold steel, keen with hunger of blood; but rather the soft budding fingertips where no talons grow. He takes his hand and brushes it against the side of Rhysâ face, an act that has become so tender in the time theyâve known each other. Rough and calloused his own were, with blood staining when he looked at them too long. In the same way if he listened to the rain on the roof too closely heâd know the mud in his boots, and silence on the night with the iced winds that knifed his exposed skin.Â
It was dangerous, to be this close to another. The safety of Nathaniel distant and lost to their hours of honestly in the forgotten hours of dawn. âIâm sorry to have kept you waiting, we had to finish reading everyoneâs essays around the lecture before we were allowed to leave.â Drenched, Nathaniel could feel the puddle forming beneath his feet, and the way his clothes clung to his body. Chills would set in, goosebumps across his skin, but heâd press closer to the boy with the poignant misery in his eyes and kisses his neck.
âIâve got to have a shower, if you join me I can make it up to you.â
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLETCHER .
Fletcher felt numb, like someone had pushed his head under water and the rest of the world was above the surface, so close he could touch it, but unable to break through the surface. It still hadnât sunk in, the truth of the matter: that he and his department were so incompetent they couldnât even keep a dead body safe. He was in a daze, going through the motions with Robbie at his side â interviewing the Johnsons, interviewing the Kanes, interviewing everyone around them. And through it all, Fletcher felt as though heâd floated out of his body, like he was watching his life happen to him as a passive participant rather than someone in control. He could hear himself ask all the right questions â did you hear anything suspicious? Did you see anyone behaving oddly? How long were you away from the casket? â and he could see the way he nodded carefully, the way he wrote notes in his illegible scrawl, but all he could feel was the throbbing of his head, the sweat on his back, and the way his heart spasmed like some sort of broken, exhausted thing, like a dying horse collapsing to the ground.
It was sweltering and muggy, and he could see heat coming off of the pavement in rippling waves, could see the way the air warped around him, almost shimmering, slick like an oil spill. Fletcher thought, with bitter bitter skepticism, that maybe Wade was his own personal Hell: so hot he couldnât breathe with a case heâd never be able to solve. His badge felt heavy on his chest, like it was sinking into his skin, tearing through to his heart, and he just wanted a fucking drink. And thenâ
There was it was again.
Cutting through the white noise of his brain, magnified with alarming clarity, juxtaposed to the haze of the world around him, it was the voice that had haunted his dreams for weeks, the low rumble that stirred its way through him, made him hollow like a reed. The voice that conjured those hands that burned his skin to touch, those eyes that carved away everything about him that wasnât real and left him harrowed, this defenseless, weak pathetic thing that could crumble to dust if pushed too hard. Now, with time and hindsight to be objective, he realized one thing and one thing alone: this man was not real. He couldnât be. Fletcher was exhausted. He was hungover. He was dehydrated. He was grieving. And if he was going to be haunted, it was now, at his lowest and weakest, just as heâd been the last time this man had appeared.
For one brief, fleeting moment, he thought, if he ignored the man, this specter would fade away into the rolling heat and humid sky. But then, Fletcher turned and looked at him, and he was right back at the basketball court with his heart in his hands, holding it out to this man, powerless to stop himself from letting all of it come tumbling down at just the sight of him, and god, it made anger spike up within him because none of this was real. Because every time, he was going to wake up, alone and in pain, with the taste of this man on his lips as he gave everything he was to a fucking shadow of a person.
He made a rash decision, making some excuses to whoever he was talking to â he didnât remember what he said, but did it matter? This was a dream, a hallucination, some last crack of his shattering mind, so he had no reason to observe decorum â and wrapped his hand around the manâs arm, around his bicep, dragging him forcefully towards a secluded spot, away from the crowd, in the shadow of a large white oak tree. Once they were alone, Fletcher thought heâd be able to breathe again, but somehow, it was worse, like this man had his hands around his throat, and Fletcher would never ask him to stop.
âYou need to leave,â he hissed, words twisting together, practically stumbling over them, in his haste to get them out. People would notice if he was missing. People would come looking for him. And if they found him mumbling to himself behind a fucking tree, the talk of the town would be Sheriff Wright, finally cracked under the pressure. âGo back to whatever hellish corner of my mind you came from and let me do my job.â
Fletcher squeezed his eyes shut, blinking rapidly, trying to clear his mind. And yet, the man stayed right there, unmoving, looking as real as the night they met, his hand still clenched around the otherâs arm. He released him, palms pressed flat to the manâs chest, ignoring how solid he felt under his hands, instead pushing him backwards, venom in his eyes. âHaunt me another time. Find me in my dreams. Make me miserable then. But now? Those people? Theyâre all looking at me to have my shit together, and I canât be here, chasing ghosts.â
To be someone when masses surround, and when eyes drift over those pristine monet you paint before them. Lined in gold, placid blues and beige paint- Arthur was someone to be admired before the eyes of others. It was easy to be this man, the one heâd learn in sacred walls with bruises ripe on his skin- one heâd learn from too rich boys in college with not a worry in the world. Each time he picked up the pile of bones heâd come to call his own, heâd find these traits of others he admired. Longed to be.
He wasnât expecting it all to shatter before him by the grip of a ghost searing into his flesh, and flooding his insides with the taste of that ever burning fire again. Bruises heâd hope would be left from his tight grip because that would show they both were here- together. Wherever here was, Arthur was unsure. Anywhere but the living.
But then, why did the living look at him so? And why could he feel the gentle vibrations of another missed call silent in his pocket as he stood under the encompassing shade of the oak tree.
The strike to his chest like dangerous waves crashing against a graystone cliff face, desperate, fumbling. The man today would be the wine dark sea, ruinous and drowning in his own waters, and Arthur wanted to open himself and allow the man to pour his floods into him. A dangerous thought heâd allow himself to have. âIâm afraid youâre not in my dreams,â His tone itself was instead like the calm before the storm- dangerously calm. He couldnât admit he didnât think this man was real, he couldnât admit again that he didnât consider himself to be real. No matter how much the otherâs words convince him with each addition- Arthur had to remind himself that he was standing here. Feet in the mud, his hands shoved into his pockets as he fears if theyâre not, heâll reach out to the other. âSo weâll have to make do with a morbid setting if thatâ with you.â
It was this point which Arthur realised- he had no plan on what he was going to say to this man now they stood facing each other. He could endlessly list all the things he didnât want to say to him. But after approaching him, seeing that perhaps he is something solid standing here with dirt on his boots and sweat on his back, Arthur had nothing to say. It was a mistake, a poorly thought out mistake to hold the otherâs heart in his hands and not give it back to him. Because he wanted it- he wanted this.
âIâm Arthur, and perhaps if youâd like I can help you find your footing. But Iâd like a name, if thatâs alright by you, Sheriff?â
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
date: april 25th, 2020 time: 05:21Â pm location: kane funeral home status:Â @detectivewrightâ
Chattering masses gather under a sodden sky, washed with greys and blues that swallowed the sight of the setting sun. Darkness would begin to fall behind the unruly clouds, threatening floods to pour from the sky once again, just as it was that morning. The sleek shimmer still left everything in sight damp, and the humidity crawled from the earth and sprawled sweat clinging to the back of Arthurâs button-down. At a funeral for a woman heâd never met, shoes damp, soaked through from the grass of greening pears. He thinks itâs the polite thing to do, to show up even when he knows no one. Or perhaps because heâs expecting to look inside that casket and see himself lying there, palms turned towards the sky in black boards as dark as the earth.Â
Theyâre told to leave. A demand heâd never thought heâd hear spoken to a lawn of the community, waiting to say their farewells in a pristine home that resembled something of a sanctuary. He waits, it doesnât feel right to leave, not just yet. So he places a cigarette between his lips, and he watches to the wading mass of residents eager to flock to the next big tale. His eyes that of the setting sky, skimming each person with such curiosity.Â
He could have been a ghost standing there, amongst whispering crowds, smoke trailing from his lips where it promised his own dissipation. Rolled sleeves to his elbows, his jacket draped over arm, muggy air clinging to his lungs with each breath he draws in. Then he sees him, a man he thought died before he met him, standing in the daylight with a badge over his heart that glistened like the soaked surroundings. Itâs not too late to leave, to slip out of the crowds and pick up from Wade. He still had everything to return to- unanswered calls buzzing in his pocket, a job waiting for this monthâs derailing to be done with. To leave the place a man adorned in uniform, with a stern expression painted across his brow knew everything that crumbled beneath his mask that was so feint to trace. But god he was too drawn to the man.
Flicking his cigarette to the grass, embers dusting against the grass- he grinds the last of it into the gravel and one cautious footstep after the next, he approaches the masterpiece of the man that wears his own mask untraceable. Arthurâs attention isnât even divided to those the other man speaks to with the notepad in hand, his hues search the sight before him. âExcuse me, I donât mean to interrupt anything of importance.â Careful his words are, theyâre always careful when heâs Arthur. He wonders if itâs the same for the ghost before him. âIf itâs not too much to ask, Sheriff, may I steal you away?â
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLETCHER .
oblvvicn·:
Red ashes smouldering, flickering ember reminders that caught in Arthurâs throat and burnt away his breaths. He didnât know how much it would hurt. To loose the manâs touch after it seared into his wrist- feeling the packed earth beneath his back, and the poison in his veins turn to stars. Aching for that feeling to return, to have the otherâs hands on his wrists again, against his skin.Â
You are alive.Â
Arthur tells himself. Even though his head spins with whiskey haze, and the ghosts of the night settle into the two menâs shadows. And the cavernous insides of a man contained a creature he feared to let into the world. Heavy, with this marrow born dance. He watches the other, the ache deep in the pit of him for anything other than this numbing chill that settled into his bones once more. Heâd watch him move through the nightâs air, like if he moved any faster the man that was Arthur would dissipate beneath him like fog that breathed bleak winter mornings. Thereâd be nothing where a ghost should have been.
And Arthur thought perhaps the same would happen when he felt the otherâs fingers brush against his neck. Wind breathing kisses against the exposed skin, the otherâs touch was light and yet seared white-hot. But he was still there, his breath still in throat and eyes like theyâre staring into the sun as they look back to the man that stood at the edge of the cliff Arthur promised. Looking down into the abyss that swallowed everything, for it was all it knew to do. Consume until nothing was left. And he dived right into it.
Parched, he kissed the man that ached like the starry dark. Greedy, the thing he knows that begs for more kisses back- carving its knife into the fruit before him. Tearing open the sky, he could taste the revenant on the manâs tongue. Cosmos dust, and bubbling rivers, he was alive.
Arthur felt the clawing in the chest- begging to be freed. His hand presses to the otherâs chest, where he wants to sink his fingers into his flesh, and dig into his insides. And god, he wants to allow himself to be dead with this man, buried in the dampened earth where forests can grow alive over their bodies, and rivers can carry their spirits. And their bones, left bloodied and ingested, porous as they are dissolve. But this dream wonât end like all the others, he wonât allow it. To have this man nothing more than a fractured boned carcass left with the poison Arthur fed it, rotting with the buzz of flies like static rooms. Crimson dripping, torn. Ravaged.Â
He pushes. Hand flat against his chest where he wants to harrow, he parts their lips and is left staring at where his hand holds the warmth of the otherâs chest. Where his hand that feels the heartbeat flush against it is still real, no matter how much he wishes it wasnât.
âWe should get you home.â
Fletcher wasnât sure when his lips on this manâs mouth turned from being some kind of salvation into being a curse. Just like that, the whole night shattered into pieces, with the feeling of a hand on his chest, putting space between them, with the feeling of the air between them filling with the truth of the world, the fact that they were both real in all of the worst ways and that reality filtering into all of the cracks and fissures between them. Fletcher felt like he was trying to stop sand from escaping between his fingertips in a gust of wind, as though he was chasing something unknowable and intangible, and he felt the space between them become this cavernous, impenetrable thing.
 We should get you home.
You could throw a rock and hit his bedroom window from where they lay here. Home was an excuse, home was a shard of glass in his heart, home was everything he felt â or thought he felt â right here, with this manâs hand on his chest and his mouth crushing Fletchers like grapes to wine, and he thought of everything heâd forsaken for this one stolen kiss: his morals, his dignity, his truth. And now, it seemed, all of it was for nothing.
Or perhaps it wasnât for nothing. Perhaps Fletcher wanted tragedy more than he wanted love, perhaps he wanted someone to break his heart and kick his teeth in, and this, well, this was that. Heâd tried the kind of love that filled you up and left you warm, and heâd broken it. Now, he was ready for something different But that didnât mean this didnât fucking hurt.
We should get you home.
Heâd never heard words he hated more. He wanted to rip them from the manâs mouth with his teeth, wanted to taste his blood on his lips, wanted to howl at the moon and fucking rage because it wasnât fair, it wasnât meant to be this way, if he thought this was how it would end, he never would have gotten in the manâs car in the first place.
(A lie â there were infinite universes out there, and in every single one, Fletcher would have gotten in that car, Fletcher would have kissed him, and Fletcher would have been left, alone, with the taste of a ghost on his lips)
We should get you home.
He pulled himself away, finally, unstuck from the moment. Rolled back onto his back. And then unsteadily jerked himself to his feet. He turned back to the man, words on his lips, but they died in his throat. What was there left to say? He didnât know. But thenâ
âI wish you were real,â he sighed, quiet, so quiet the night may have swallowed it altogether.
And then, heavy footfall after heavy footfall, he walked back to his house, slamming the door behind him, locking it, slumping against it, a shaky hand unbuckling his trousers, his eyes fluttering shut, picturing the man on top of him, the moon hanging over one shoulder, the stars twinkling above the other.
FIN.
.
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
RHYS .
âsorry, what did you say? i was not quite listening.â he was, but to the voice and not the words. words were meaningless, at this time of the night. empty and devoid of true intentions, usually. this time of the night was not reserved for words, he thought as the tips of his fingers brushed against the other manâs arm. soft, and seemingly pliable. the manâs cologne was faintly discernible behind the heaviness of the alcohol fumes. removing his finger, he drummed them against the countertop, humming. remembered the manâs voice. low and precise, the kind to provoke goosebumps down his back.
remembering and not remembering something his brain wanted him to know. he tried to sharpen his stare as his head turned once again.
âyou canât visit other bars,â the barkeep pushes another drink his way after his other hand waved at him. âhere, i mean. this town âŠâ rhys licked his lips, chasing after the taste of this cheap whiskey. he really ought to request the owner a better stock. slowly watching the liquid slosh around the glass, rhys narrowed his eyes at it. wondered how much time would it take for the town to become a ghost of it previous self, transforming into something better. â⊠itâs empty. devour us poor souls, judges our impure thoughts and condemns us to relive our fears. itâs tartarus, and weâre all sisyphus here, sentenced to roll a fucking boulder for eternity.â
rhys would admit later that he was, maybe, a bit too high and drunk to engage in any conversations with anyone. he never did quite make sense, in this state. still, right now, it seemed like his mind didnât quite get the memo yet, as he turned once again to the man next to him. âmen like you, they donât belong here. youâre too sharp.â sniffing, rhys scrubbed his face, exasperated in the next seconds. his mood swings never did reconcile very well with drugs, and really, he should leave the pretty man alone.
âtoo pretty.â rhys looked over the stranger once again. perhaps if men like them could be here, discussing in the fanciest bar in wade, maybe there was a chance at redemption for this town. âunless youâre here for business, that isâŠâ a hand gesture at himself, as he shrugged at the same time. âand really, thatâs a compliment, if i wasnât forward enough.â god knew some residents in this town were not too fast with subtleties.
Men like you, they donât belong here. The otherâs words rang swamped his ears, and drowned out the white noise of meaningless chatter that coaxed Arthur into the timeless lull heâd fallen into tonight. Taste of whisky coating his tongue, swimming in his veins. The words beat, and demand his attention. Wade. Here. In a town that sunk into his flesh, and sunk talons into his ankles. Maybe itâs the intoxication that sings belief that maybe the other is right, this is Tartarus. But heâd not yet crossed through the river.
He was right. Arthur was all too much of a man built for the city, with lies forming lives, and silk thread linings of suits holding together matted messes of beings. Phone calls still unanswered, from a wife heâd left behind. Why hadnât he thrown out the phone yet?
Lies, even to himself. Arthur says he wonât stay here, not for long. Why didnât he believe his own voice.
And maybe itâs the same amber liquid that mixes his blood to ichor, that brings the laugh to his lips as he listenâs to the other manâs words. Bright, thereâs something daring to the full bellied laugh thatâs dull like a ringing gunshot. Ironic it was, that heâd grown up on the outskirts of a town just like this. Swallowed in too green grass, and soil on his hands. Clothes with patches heâd sew to cover the seams that tugged at the fabric. Heâd stitch something of himself, a boy too young. A boy that would learn to devour the world. âHere we both are- men like us that is.â The words taste of dew, cool to his tongue. Sweet almost, even at this hour.Â
âIâm here for work, but thatâs not the same as business. And yourself? Do you find yourself with company such as tonight for business or pleasure?âÂ
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLETCHER .
Fletcher heard the man as though from far away, so faint over the way his blood was fucking roaring through him, ringing in his ears. Whatever he said, it didnât fucking matter, and whatever he meant, Fletcher didnât fucking care. This man, over the course of one night, heâd stolen Fletcherâs breath and his heart, and still, with his hand on the strangerâs pulse and his eyes locked on his throat, Fletcher couldnât tell whether this person was made of skin and bones and sinew or whether his mind had concocted the closest thing to divinity it could muster. And if this man was simply a trick of the mind, of course it was him. All Fletcher had wanted, his whole life, was to dive into the void and see what was at the bottom, and here he was, this chasm of a man that Fletcher could drown in, this person he could pour all his feeling into, this being who could be his own custom made swan song.
He could feel how fast the strangerâs pulse was beating, like a hummingbird trapped between his thumb and forefinger, and he could feel the way his own heart modulated to match, and the whole night, he hadnât been able to quite catch his breath, but now, god, now, he felt like it had been ripped from him, and heâd never get it back, so the only way was for him to steal it, to press his lips to this manâs mouth and swallow every shallow gasp of air that sputtered from his lungs.
Fletcher couldnât resist any longer.
He moved slowly, as if he was trying not to disturb the air around them, dazedly, as though he was in a dream. His grip loosened on the manâs wrist as he shifted onto his side, letting go completely as he propped himself up with that same hand, that hand that felt like it was on fire, like it had just been coiled around a fucking star, pulsing and spitting and snarling with energy. Here, his head tipped downward, he could see everything: the lines around the manâs eyes, the strength of his brow, the jut of his adams apple, the angle of his jaw, the shape of his lips.
Using his free hand, the hand that wasnât supporting him, he reached out, again landing first on the lapel of the manâs shirt, because the thought of touching him, of feeling his skin under his fingers â he couldnât bear it. He needed to ease into it, the way you eased into an ice bath, the way you eased into a coffin. And from the manâs collar, Fletcherâs hand is on his neck, at his jaw, tipping his head back ever so slightly because yet again, for the second time this night, heâs reached a point of no return, where heâs willingly hefted himself off a ledge, thrown himself off a cliff, just to chase after this feeling, and heâs tumbling through the air, the world spinning around him, and all he can think is to close his eyes, drop his head, and kiss this man breathless.
Heâs hesitant at first, cautious. Because what if this isnât real? What if he just poured himself into a ghost, or worse, the walking dead? But then, he realized, it didnât matter because he was incapable of stopping himself. There had been a precipice, earlier that night, and Fletcher had either been too drunk on whisky or too enamored by this stranger to notice that heâd thrown himself over it without so much as a second thought, and now, hurtling through space, all he could do was listen to the blood in his ears and the thump of his heart, urging him to fall deeper, fall faster, not brace himself for the impact. And then, he felt his own mouth go slack and pliant, kissing the man with feeling now, because once you realized there was nothing left to lose, anything was possible.
Once you realized that youâd found your heart, staring at you from the bottom of a well, and that well was a man in a suit who tasted like midnight fog and the ocean tide and a cold winter night, there was no stopping you from throwing yourself over the edge and seeing what it was like when you eventually hit the bottom.
Red ashes smouldering, flickering ember reminders that caught in Arthurâs throat and burnt away his breaths. He didnât know how much it would hurt. To loose the manâs touch after it seared into his wrist- feeling the packed earth beneath his back, and the poison in his veins turn to stars. Aching for that feeling to return, to have the otherâs hands on his wrists again, against his skin.Â
You are alive.Â
Arthur tells himself. Even though his head spins with whiskey haze, and the ghosts of the night settle into the two menâs shadows. And the cavernous insides of a man contained a creature he feared to let into the world. Heavy, with this marrow born dance. He watches the other, the ache deep in the pit of him for anything other than this numbing chill that settled into his bones once more. Heâd watch him move through the nightâs air, like if he moved any faster the man that was Arthur would dissipate beneath him like fog that breathed bleak winter mornings. Thereâd be nothing where a ghost should have been.
And Arthur thought perhaps the same would happen when he felt the otherâs fingers brush against his neck. Wind breathing kisses against the exposed skin, the otherâs touch was light and yet seared white-hot. But he was still there, his breath still in throat and eyes like theyâre staring into the sun as they look back to the man that stood at the edge of the cliff Arthur promised. Looking down into the abyss that swallowed everything, for it was all it knew to do. Consume until nothing was left. And he dived right into it.
Parched, he kissed the man that ached like the starry dark. Greedy, the thing he knows that begs for more kisses back- carving its knife into the fruit before him. Tearing open the sky, he could taste the revenant on the manâs tongue. Cosmos dust, and bubbling rivers, he was alive.
Arthur felt the clawing in the chest- begging to be freed. His hand presses to the otherâs chest, where he wants to sink his fingers into his flesh, and dig into his insides. And god, he wants to allow himself to be dead with this man, buried in the dampened earth where forests can grow alive over their bodies, and rivers can carry their spirits. And their bones, left bloodied and ingested, porous as they are dissolve. But this dream wonât end like all the others, he wonât allow it. To have this man nothing more than a fractured boned carcass left with the poison Arthur fed it, rotting with the buzz of flies like static rooms. Crimson dripping, torn. Ravaged.Â
He pushes. Hand flat against his chest where he wants to harrow, he parts their lips and is left staring at where his hand holds the warmth of the otherâs chest. Where his hand that feels the heartbeat flush against it is still real, no matter how much he wishes it wasnât.
âWe should get you home.â
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
ROBBIE .
âah,â robbie pauses from his close up observation of the tire to look at the other man, and tilted his head. âyouâll definitely get that around here.â if robbie had been privy to the rumour mills recently, other than to put out feelers regarding the whole townâs reaction to josieâs investigation, he might have heard of this new hotshot city teacher starting at the school. but robbie was nothing if not consistent with his displeasure of listening to gossips, so heâd missed out. a lot of new people in wade recently, though. that he noted. like moth attracted to flames. robbie only hoped none of them would get burn by the current townâs dramatic events.
his fingers spotted the nail, and the deputy was relieved. that meant that something could be done temporarily for arthurâs tire. soon enough, robbie had gotten some tools from his trunk and was sitting on the ground, trying to tape it and push it down. âso, the high school. youâre a teacher, i guess?â the manâs elocution was too good for him to be a mere janitor, and his posture seemed to show a certain ease that small town people did not have. aâŠbusiness kind of ease.
âin any case, i admire your courage and bravery. working with teenagersâŠphew.â truth was, robbie also worked with teenagers in his line of work, if arresting them in the middle of the night for trying to investigate cryptids and ghosts could be considered as working with them. he doubted it was. âgod knows some of them needs good leadership.â robbie would never draw any names, but he knew who he was talking about. âalright, i think thatâs it man. just need to pump some air and youâll be good until tomorrow, at least.â up to his feet in an efficient move, robbie cleaned his hands on the back of his jeans. a bad habit from usually working on his bike in old rags. âi can give you directions to gabeâs for tomorrow.â
Arthur should have known he never truly would have been able to blend into Wade, not like he did in the city. With thousands of faces passing everyday, masses gathering and disbanding through the streets, heâd be nothing more than another man in a suit. There was peace found in that, in not being noticed by people with more interesting lives without you in it. Wade was small enough, the streets heâd drive through that all look the same even in sunset. And faces of residents, all staring, searching for something to pry into. Heâd be far from invisible, so he had to be someone no matter where he walked. He had to cover the cavern of nothing that swallowed him whole.
âEnglish for the most part, unless they need subs elsewhere.â Heâs taught his words to come more naturally over the years, from when they once caught in his throat and failed to find their footing in the world. He learnt to mimic horns at dawn, and crisp breeze on the horizon- the blue wafts that promise day to return. But all this, itâs unnatural in Wade.
Perhaps he made a mistake.
âI guess I havenât gotten to know them well enough, always on their best behaviour the first few weeks arenât they?â It had been just over a week since he first stepped into the desolate town, not barley enough to know anyone yet, and not nearly enough to know if he was going to stay. The plan after all was just to continue driving- but heâs here. Offering a smile to the deputy with a hand on top of his carâs roof, âI canât thank you enough.â He holds out a hand to shake the otherâs, a proper thanks heâd been taught years ago.
âWould you let me buy you a beer tomorrow maybe, after Gabeâs? Iâve got to get back to grading tonight- otherwise.âÂ
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
WAVERLY .
Where: Redâs Diner When: April 26th, 2:36pm
âI was thinking of starting a list.â
Waverly spoke without provocation in the middle of her meal, turning to the person sitting next to her at the counter. âA rotation, of sort. Everyone could sign up for certain days, that way the burden doesnât fall all onto one person. Bringing things to the Johnsons. You know, groceries, supplies, maybe even just a friendly face to say hello and check in.â She frowned, eyes flicking down to the floor. âIt could be stupid. I donât know.â The sincerity was surprisingly devoid of true care. She was bored and needed a project, and it seemed that she was trapped here forever in this hell, so might as well spruce the place up. Kindness could look good on a town like this at a time like this.
âAll Iâll say is this: I think we could all use something uplifting in our lives, no one more than Red Johnson, and what better way to soothe the collective heart than to soothe his?â
She glanced over at her companion, eyes flickering up and down the personâs face. Waverly was a social animal, struck up conversations with anyone who stepped within a ten foot radius of her. Whether she enjoyed them or not was an entirely different question, but that didnât stop her from speaking to every person she came in contact with until she found someone who didnât bore her.
However, this particular conversation, this particular day, she was playing a game of hers that had only begun after the McDermotts had moved to Wade, a game that had become a recent obsessionââ
Who here, in this place, has fucked my wife?
Without a real stove, or oven, or even a fridge that was more than the height of his knees with rust eroding the outsides that attempted to be covered with pamphlets of nearby pizza joints, and tourist attraction magnets- Arthur was left without a proper way of acquiring a meal in Wade. That was of course, without visiting Redâs Diner for the fifth time in a row. He wished he could say it was for their chips and steak, or the gravy that smothered the top- hell even a decent coffee. But unfortunately it was none of the above. He was frankly just thankful for a warm meal that wasnât microwaved, and that should have been enough.
Barley over a week in Wade, he was already beginning to realise the certain suffocation of familiar faces when the brunette beside him piped up as if theyâd been friends since as long as he could remember. Waverly heâs certain her name was, heâd remember her at services bright eyed and adoring. But it was her wife he knew better, by whiskey kept hours, and conversation that never lead anywhere between them. Always dancing around things unsaid, they were good at not saying a thing. Let alone enough to give the other an ounce of what they meant.
âI have to say Iâm surprised,â He offered the other, careful with his words. âI didnât think anyone was Redâs biggest fan by the sounds of it.â Arthur was unfortunately roped into community values at home, his wife would say it was good for them. Dinner parties, and barbecues to catch up, let the kids run in the yard with the couple from a few doors down. But they would never dare dream of helping each other, that didnât seem to be the way from where they were from.
âThat sounds nice though. Will the residents here go for that kind of thing?â
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
DAISY .
TIME: Early afternoon, after Josieâs âfuneralâ LOCATION: Quick stop convenience & gas STATUS: Closed, @oblvvicn
DJ felt stupid â- she shouldnât be feeling sad, pitying herself that she felt sick over there being no body in the casket at the funeral. And yet, she was at the convenience store, a bottle of cheap white wine as her one and only goal for that evening.Â
Hours and hours after the whole ordeal â yet another one attached to the Johnson family name; if DJ didnât know better, sheâd wager that family was somehow cursed â DJ found herself stopping by the convenience store before heading home. A detour she shouldnât have taken but did anyway.Â
As she walked in, DJ saw a man struggling with the drinks machine. For a few heartbeats, she stood at the entrance, looking at the alcohol shelves and him, trying to decide what to go for first. With a small sigh, DJ walked towards the machine and the man struggling with it. âItâs an old machine,â she began, before she hit its side, âit has a few tricks. Plus, the buttons are not installed right. The whole thing is basically upside down. So, if you want 1, you have to click 7 instead.â
Such strange things had been happening in a town that appeared quiet enough to hear the coyotes howling as they come from the outskirts of town, and the car leaving the garage a block away at eleven oâclock at night. Heâd showed to the funeral today, not because he knew the woman, or anyone in town that needed his presence there. Rather he gathered on that front lawn, too green grass beneath his feet, waiting in that searing sun and humidity, just to pay his respects. Where sweat made his shirt cling to his back, and he gathered with the rest of the town, he was surprised to uttered away after their waiting.
Never had he attended a funeral that was canceled right before everyone stepped into the viewing room.Â
Questions were ripe on everyoneâs lips, and he guessed rightfully so. But the man didnât have anything to offer, conversation, stories, gossip- wonderings of what happened. So he left, it felt the appropriate thing to do. Down at the quickstop picking up some more smokes and a something sugary he was relieved to hear a voice chime behind him.
âOld? This thingâs decrepit. Youâre not about to tell me my soda will come out rusted as well, are you?â Listening to the otherâs advice, Arthur pressed the 4th button down and heard the rattling inside. âCan I get you one?â
1 note
·
View note
Text
FLETCHER .
He felt the wind knock out of him, felt hollow as a reed, laughter going through him like a breathless sigh becauseâŠwas that a joke?
Fletcher felt giddy, dizzy, drunk, and not off the whisky, off whatever it was sparking between them. There was no way he was imagining this, no way this was all in his head, because how could he have thought up such a person? One moment, he felt like he was looking into a mirror, the next, like he was looking upon something, someone so bright he felt like he was looking at the sun or a planet, exploding into bits. And normally, all he wanted was for the feeling in his chest to stop, to numb to a quiet roar, but right now, he couldnât imagine anything worse, couldnât imagine anything more tragic. But perhaps, this, in itself, was a tragedy because Fletcher had never wanted to be happy, not really, had just wanted to rough him up, bruise his lips, and break his heart, and here he was, his every desire delivered, and there was nothing saying that this man, this perfect creation of his imagination, was anything more real than the stars in the night sky, stars that had already moved out of their orbit, and all they were looking at were the afterimages, the relics of something lost, something gone.
For the first time since coming to this place, since finding this court and lying on the concrete, feeling the way his heart hammered against his ribs, against the ground, he found something he wanted. He found something that made him, even for the briefest moment, forget about the scar tissue in his shoulder, forget about the meanness in his belly, forget about the missed calls from his mother burning a hole in his pocket.
âI hope youâre real,â he said, voice barely above a whisper, refusing to look at the man, keeping his eyes pointedly fixed at the sky. Fletcher was willing to look down the barrel of a gun, but he wasnât a brave man. Staring death in the eye, that didnât take courage. That took chaos.
And he prayed the man didnât hear how want made his voice sound so twisted, so unlike himself. But how would he know what Fletcher was supposed to sound like? And who was to say the Fletcher that put himself together in the mornings, that scrubbed his skin raw, parted his hair to the left, buttoned his shirts all the way up to the throat, and tried not to crumble under the weight of his badge, who was to say that was the real him? Alexander, he hadnât thought about him in a while. The young boy heâd once been, with enough sadness to fill an ocean. Perhaps that was the only real version of himself there had ever been. Perhaps Fletcher was the one who didnât exist.
But Fletcher was all he had.
And he needed to know.
They were close, him and this stranger, not too close, but close enough that, if he inched his hand to the right, he could touch him, could put this to rest once and for all. One swig of liquid courage later, then two, then three â god, the world was spinning â and finally, he was ready to do what heâd wanted to do all night.
Hand trembling, he reached over and found the manâs forearm, feeling the linen of his shirt under his palm, feeling the way his heart stuttered in his chest at the very touch. But this, it was mere lead up to the grand event, and now that heâd started, he couldnât stop, blustering ahead, sliding his hand down lower, where his skin was no longer sheathed in clothing, and, taking a deep breath, curled his fingers around the delicate bones of his wrist. He was expecting some sort of shock when their skin touched, some sort of spark, because isnât that what was supposed to happen when you found someone like this? But no, he felt the swoop and sputter of his heart, the way his blood rushed to his cheeks, and most of all, he felt the way the manâs blood roared, the strangerâs pulse thrumming against the pad of his index finger. This man was as real as he could be, so real that Fletcher could feel the life thrumming through him, and heâd never felt such joy as this.
He couldnât stop himself. The night sky held nothing for him now.
Before he could second guess himself, he turned his head. And there, lit by the moon, with his head turned up to the heavens, with eyes he could drown in, with his void of a heart, with the thrum of life against the tips of Fletcherâs fingersâ
He had never seen anyone so beautiful.
Stars flickering and fuming for their place in the sky, burned the same as the last time heâd lie on his back and stare up to them. His shadows are ghosts, threatening the truth of the men heâs been. These stars were just as he remembered them when he was too young to know their tales. Too young to taste blood in his mouth, and the dizziness of never sleeping right again. Memories long lost to a boy that Arthur never was- so why here, tonight, did he know them so vividly.
Dirt caked beneath his back, stale earth that held the weight of aching men, and deep belly laughter as they spin tales lustrous to the night. Giant monsters, with tales dripping in venom and skeletons too tough to pierce- destined to chase figures in the sky for the rest of their lives. And men who bring tales of ease, returning to their mothers warm embrace where they smile down. And of those loyal enough to spend eternity along side their companions.Â
The boy who was never Arthur would listen to men whoâd count stars, and make up their own for where their friends now lie. While the boy wondered what it was like to touch them. Death was all too familiar, but at night when silence settled around the camp, and men drunken on the sense of being alive laughed at stories of those whoâd left the world too young- they thought they just might be alive forever.
He was back there tonight, a teen too young to know himself, yet old enough to accept such things. Someone whoâd have a stolen name cursing their tongue with men who said it with the sorrow it held.Â
Stuck in these memories he tried so desperately to forget.
Arthurâs breath caught in his chest as he felt the otherâs fingers on his clothes. Back he was under streetlights and stars, on a basketball court in a town that could help the world forget him. He thinks for a moment, that if he looks across the other will no longer be there- but he can feel the warmth coming from his body. He can hear his breathing in the silent night. He can feel his cool fingers wrap around his wrist, shackling him to this earth. Iron bound, Arthur was alive.
Thrumming- his heart races in his own ears, or it the wingless creature in his chest that longed to be freed. Beating, it grappled with his insides. Tore, and Arthur could feel his seams splintering. The stitched that hold him together fraught. He turns his head, and itâs like the beginning again. Heâs hungry, to love like a creature begging to be freed. Beating against this tether the other man places around his wrist, and ready to split his bones wide open, and bare himself before the other.
He wanted to taste the stars.
His head turned, heâd stare at the other. Dark hues tracing the scars on his face like constellations, wondering if this burning at his wrist was what it felt like to be alive. To have the universe ignite his insides, and replace the black hole that demanded- with the stars he stared so greedily at. Heâd look at the man the same, hungry for the beating in his chest. Hungry to rip into flesh and bone, and life until there was nothing left but a carcass of the stars and that ache left lingering.
Instead he finds words to fill his lips, almost a whisper to the air. âDo I seem alive to you?â
16 notes
·
View notes
Text
RHYS .
where: conifer lounge when: april 22th, 12:59am who:Â @oblvvicnâ
the plan had been simple, get them around town, show them what they were working with, what they already made, showcase wadeâs investment potential. the basics of a successful, was to make sure that the financial risk was not entirely dropped onto kingsbury incorporated. the governorâs had been favourable to his efforts, as well as many other businesses in illinois. if wade was a success, other towns might be interested in his developments. it was a simple plan. get them in, show them the good, new parts of wade but then âŠ
then they wanted to see the old part of wade.
wanted to feel the classic americana feel that made the town so authentic, wanted to see what the brochure promised, back in 1972. that was obviously a mistake, as rhys did not think that older wade had much to offer beside a dirty dinner, a shady roller-skating thing and the motel that probably had more sanitation hazards than third-world hospitals. really, a quick tour and rhys knew the men were not much impressed, but they understood his mission now. and whatever that had took, it needed a celebration. and the only place that could offer some solution to this particular issue was the conifer lounger. it was not really fancy, with all its patrons preferring cheap beer to refined alcohols.
but that would do.
they found a booth, in the back. well, they displaced some people, for the booth in the back.
soon enough, minutes transformed into hours into too many shots and coke lines.
the life of the rich and powerful, some might say. rhys thought that this particular mix would perhaps help to tolerate his new business partners (how many contracts could one sign while absolutely drunk on tequila? a question for the lawyers) but of course, his luck had run its course for the day. âgentlemen, i think we need, to get you home.â home was the private jets, private cars, waiting for them on a private parking. his words were slurring, but his smile was still as charming. a few minutes, rhys was finally alone with himself and he made his way to the bar, ready to settle the bill.
and maybe, if rhys had taken another line, another shot, maybe his perception would have played tricks on him and he would have missed the man at the bar. alone. extremely attractive. drumming his fingers on the surface, he zeroed in on the brunette, paused when only a seat kept the distance between the two. âthis suit is the best thing iâve seen today.â his hand hovered over the fabric, not quite touching the manâs arm. rhys couldnât quite believe that he finally found someone with a decent fashion sense in old wade.
Music low stirred the air of a stale bar that simmered in low lights that distorts its patronâs faces into things of the dark, that even the warm hues donât mask. In this late hour though Arthur isnât looking around, he doesnât much care for the guests still left that are surely the same ones as last night and the night before that, and the night before that- as if they never leave this space and rather just exist as decoration for the bar. Perhaps this is where he could dissolve into the town of Wade. Washed in crimson that painted the whites of his clothes, and stained the colour of the amber liquid he drank. And while the hue strained his eyes, he came to accept that he quite liked the lighting that drenched everything it touched, for even he might be painted as something alive in so much colour.
Arthur hears the voice before he realises itâs addressing him, prying his eyes from his drink they meet a man like the ones he used to know. Men with the moon in their mouths, saturated with sharp edges and that crisp coolness. Arthur would know to mirror such things, from boys in boarding schools that knew too little, and men in the world that glistened like rain touched streets. Such magnetism it held, that Arthur hadnât realised heâd missed in Wade until he was faced with the bared teeth of a wolf that promised to leave him splintered.
He offers a smile in turn, and straightens in his seat, composure taking over as that ingrained habit that sank into his bones. Perhaps there were some things that stayed true no matter who he was. âYour company didnât seem too far off the mark tonight themselves,â Barley two weeks since heâd settle in Wade, and yet the sharpness in his own voice still sounded a shock to his ears. That same voice he had before, in the life heâs still clinging to like his promises ever meant a thing. âI didnât know Wade was a town for such corporate company. Or have I just been visiting the wrong bars?â
2 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Arthur Charles Meyers - Character Development
Who are you?
BASIC CHARACTER QUESTIONS
First name? Edward Arthur
Surname? Jones Meyers
Middle names? Charles
Nicknames? n/a
Date of birth? October 29th,1977
Age? 43
PHYSICAL / APPEARANCE
Height? 6 ft 1 inches
Weight? 198 lbs
Build? Average
Hair color? Black
Eye color? Green
Glasses or contact lenses? Reading glasses
Distinguishing facial features? None, really..
Which facial feature is most prominent? That damn fine chin according to Tara.
Which bodily feature is most prominent? His hands have only been the that heâs looked at his whole life and saw himself in- for that alone theyâre most prominent because of the truth they hold.
Other distinguishing features? Heâs a pretty plain jane Â
Skin? While the tan he used to have from his days under the sun has gone, itâs not saved his skin from the hands of time. Wrinkles settle into his forehead, and around the creases of his eyes.
Hands? Arthurâs hands carry the truth of him, itâs easy to look at them and see the callouses that havenât left after years, and the faint scars that remain on the back of his hands. Theyâve seen years and years of hard work before he started writing, but those years cling to them and weathers them.
Scars? Most of Arthurâs scars are from at least 20 years ago, if not more- So theyâve faded beyond the point of recognition for the most part and blended with his skin. Faint silver slithers are still seen if you look close enough.
Birthmarks? Heâs got a faint birthmark stretching across his shin to his calf. Itâs mostly hard to distinguish these days.
Tattoos? Heâs not got any tattoos.
Physical handicaps? Nothing outside minor lingering injuries.
Type of clothes? Arthur mostly wears white button downs tucked into trousers, and on more formal occasions such as work, heâll wear a suit jacket and tie along with it. Different varying levels of formal trousers of course, heâll hardly be caught in jeans. On his days around the house, those white button downs turn to plain white t-shirts.
Race / Ethnicity? White , Caucasian
Mannerisms? Arthur while is a bit blunt quite often, is polite- especially to those he doesnât know. Old habits die hard they say, and itâs hard for him not to be on best graces with those he speaks to.
Are they in good health? Relatively, smoking as much as he does doesnât do well by his lungs- and drinking takes its toll some mornings.
Do they have any disabilities? No.
PERSONALITY
What words or phrases do they overuse? He doesnât really have any.
Do they have a catchphrase? Youâre lucky if you speak to him enough to get one.
Are they more optimistic or pessimistic? Despite what it may seem, Arthurâs more of an optimist. Heâs often pretty certain of things working his way.
Are they introverted or extroverted? Introverted.
Do they ever put on airs? Most of his life
What bad habits do they have? Smoking and drinking the most obvious, and his immediate response to flee when too much pressure is put on him.
What makes them laugh out loud? Mostly naive youth with promising hopes, but you can usually get him with a solid joke.
How do they display affection? Through honesty, even if that is in slithers of personality.
Mental handicaps? He has a mild case of PTSD
How do they want to be seen by others?
How do they see themselves? Arthur struggles to look at himself and see, well himself. He sees anyone but. Mostly he looks to himself and sees a crumbling world dissolving in his hands, as he tries constantly to patch it back up.
How competitive are they? Not very.
Do they make snap judgements or take time to consider? Snap judgement when under pressure, the rest will work itself out.
How do they react to praise? Depends on who itâs from, he mostly wonât give much of a reaction to avoid people using praise as an attempt to suck up.
How do they react to criticism? He usually takes it with a grain of salt.
What is their greatest fear? Being unraveled to the point that heâs forced to face everything thatâs true about him. Being forced to face that thereâs perhaps nothing true left to him. In a similar sentiment, perhaps his past catching up to who he is today.
What are their biggest secrets? Besides their whole life? I mean mainly that his whole identity is a lie.
What is their philosophy of life? Start again, maybe this time youâll do it right.
When was the last time they cried? He canât remember.
What haunts them? His own demons.
Are they indoorsy or outdoorsy? Pretty much a mix, Iâd say mostly indoorsy?
What is their sinful little habit? Do affairs count?
What sense do they most rely on? Sight
How do they treat people better than them? Like theyâre on the same level.
How do they treat people worse than them? Like heâs a good role model.
What quality do they most value in a friend? Loyalty?
What do they consider an overrated virtue? Morality
If they could change one thing about themselves, what would it be? He thinks he might like to be human.
What is their obsession? Mortality.
What are their pet peeves? Someone speaking to him when itâs really not necessary.
FRIENDS AND FAMILY
Is their family big or small? Who does it consist of? Which one? jk, jk, i swear - his immediate relatives, he doesnât have any alive, and it was small even before that. He does have a wife, and two children, but thatâs not to say for very long.
What is their perception of family? Arthur honestly, doesnât really have one. Heâs used to it being him alone in the world.
Do they have siblings? Older or younger? None.
Describe their best friend. Before Wade, it was their boss who was the closest thing to his best friend. He wasnât a secretive type himself, but that wasnât to say he didnât have his own secrets- they just happened to be ones Arthur knew of. They understood eachother on some level, and he at least understood what Arthur needed. He knows he was expecting him to leave, theyâd both made their peace with that a long time ago.
Ideal best friend? Someone who understands that Arthur will never be around for long.
Describe their other friends. He mostly keeps people at armâs length.
Describe their acquaintances. Anyone else who might have been considered a friend, really was just an acquaintance. Mostly work colleges, people in the neighborhood who heâd attend dinner parties with, people in social circles at soirĂ©es.
Do they have any pets? None
PAST AND FUTURE
What was your character like as a baby? As a child? Arthur or well,, Edward was a quiet child- He was stoic before he knew to be a young boy. He would never speak out of line, or step out of line, he was easy to forget as he spent most of his time trying to blend in.
Did they grow up rich or poor? Poor
Did they grow up nurtured or neglected? Neglected
What is the most offensive thing they ever said? Heâs known for being quite brutal sometimes, thereâs a few things up there.
What is their greatest achievement? He couldnât tell you. He doesnât think heâs achieved much in life.
What was their first kiss like? The boy would remind him of summer, with the breeze in his laugh and the way his hands crushed strawberries like they were blood dripping from wounds. He was light, and graceful, and didnât know what pain looked like except when he would stare into Arthurâs big eyes and heâd see that mirror to his soul. They kiss as theyâre playing knights, berries sweetly staining lips, and Arthur lost his breath. He didnât see the blonde boy after that.
What is the worst thing they did to someone they loved? Arthurâs never really felt that strongly for anyone, so it doesnât take much for him to do others wrong.
What are their ambitions? To do something right this time.
What advice would they give their younger self? Think about it.
What smells remind them of their childhood? Hay bales, and mulberry bushes, and tractor exhaust, and whiskey, and cheap cigarettes, and sprinklers on freshly mowed grass.
What was their childhood ambition? To be someone worth living.
What is their best childhood memory? re bio: kissing that boy
What is their worst childhood memory? He does his best not to think about those thanks. re bio: all of it.
Did they have an imaginary childhood friend? No.
When was the last time they were crushed with disappointment? When he was sent to boarding school.
What past act are they most ashamed of? Re: all of it
What past act are they most proud of? He doesnât have a moment heâs proud of.
Has anyone ever saved their life? When he served in the army, itâs easy to say everyone there would take part in saving his life. Let alone the nurses who cared for him each time.
Strongest childhood memory? He doesnât let himself dwell on moments like these, but if any were to be the strongest it would be the one by the fireplace in the stone kitchen sitting besides the man who wasnât his father. They ate in silence, it was long after they boy should have stopped feeling like a stranger in the home, but he knows he still is. So he thanks him for the meal as they bathe in the flickering light. His eyes run across the man, taking every wrinkle in, every scar and blemish on his skin like they have their own story. Like the freckles can line up his past and expose something. And the boy asks, because he sees it in his eyes, and hears it when he opens his mouth. âWhy are you so alone?â
LOVE
Do they believe in love at first sight? No.
Are they in a relationship? Technically.
How do they behave in a relationship? Around his partner he comes off as the almost perfect partner, caring albiet a little distant at times. But heâs not behaved to say, spending nights with others, and sometimes leaving on impulse with a call in the morning with a lie. Business trips usually, last minute calls- heâs not ideal.
When did you character last have sex? Probably with his wife?
What sort of sex do they have? Who wants to know?
Has your character ever been in love? He thinks he might have been with that boy that tasted of sunshine.
Have they ever had their heart broken? No.
CONFLICT
How do they respond to a threat? He often brushes it off without much thought, or pretends itâs not gotten to him. Alternatively if itâs to do with certain things, heâll leave.
Are they most likely to fight with their fists or their tongue? Tongue
What is your characterâs kryptonite? Being known.
If your character could only save one thing from their burning house, what would it be? Heâd let it all burn.
How do they perceive strangers? Depends on what use they are to him.
What do they love to hate? He canât think of anything.
What are their phobias? Mild fear of heights, but thatâs mostly not a big deal.
What is their choice of weapon? Heâs not going to fight you.
What living person do they most despise? Himself
Have they ever been bullied or teased? Teased as a kid for being so quiet, but it never bothered him.
Where do they go when theyâre angry? Away.
Who are their enemies and why? You, you nosey bitch.
WORK, EDUCATION AND HOBBIES
What is their current job? Highschool English Professor
What do they think about their current job? He doesnât think much about it.
What are some of their past jobs? Journalist, Mechanic Hand, Farm Hand, Secretary, Copy Writer
Educational background? Studied English Literature at College
Do they have a natural talent for something? Saving a situation with what to say.
Do they play a sport? Are they any good? He played some water polo in college but was never that good at it.
What is their socioeconomic status? Upper middle, closer bordering upper class.
FAVORITES
What is their favorite animal? He likes fish, theyâre chill.
Which animal to they dislike the most? Do ants count?
What place would they most like to visit? Somewhere no one knows him.
What is the most beautiful thing theyâve ever seen? He was lieing there, heat smouldering around him and his breath barley caught staring up to the sky. It was pale and glistening in his eyes as his head spun, he knew everything around him, the fear that raced in his heart. But for this moment, he saw birds flying overhead, and everything was still.
What is their favorite song? Arthur will say he listens to Tchaikovsky- sometimes he does.
What is their favorite color? The off white of old book pages.
What is their password? It changes every month, heâs careful with privacy. This month itâs 423.RiceWhite
Favorite food: Lamb Chops and relish.
POSSESSIONS
What is in their fridge: Heâs still at the motel, so cream, some beer, maybe some leftovers.
What is on their bedside table? His reading glasses. Maybe a book.
What is in their car? Whiskey in the glove box, along with his wedding ring and a road map. A map book under the passenger car seat, maybe his briefcase from work.
What is in their bin? Coffee grinds, a takeaway box, beer bottle tops.
What is in their purse or wallet? Arthur Meyerâs ID, and âold library cardâ , he often keeps a fair amount of cash on him as he doesnât like to use card, however still has one bank card under Arthurâs name. He doesnât keep any personal memorabilia in there.
What is in their pockets? His wallet, keys, and maybe a napkin he was scratching on when he was in the diner. Also a pen.
What is their most treasured possession? His car keys, theyâre his way out.
SPIRITUALITY
Who or what is your characterâs guardian angel? He doesnât have one.
Do they believe in the afterlife? No.
What are their religious views? Raised catholic, isnât anymore. However goes to church in town for appearance.
What do they think heaven is? He doesnât think it exists.
What do they think hell is? He doesnât think it exists.
Are they superstitious? No, he doesnât think the universe cares enough about what you do.
What would they like to be reincarnated as? God he hopes he isnât.
How would they like to die? by the hands of someone who understands him, alone somewhere where no one identifies him or even finds him.
What is your characterâs spirit animal? A crow perhaps?
What is their zodiac sign? Scorpio
VALUES
What do they think is the worst thing that can be done to a person? Theyâre restrained.
What is their view of âfreedomâ? Existing.
When did they last lie? Probably in this questionnaire.
Whatâs their view of lying? It serves a cause.
When did they last make a promise? To his wife that heâll be back.
Did they keep or break their last promise? Lol, you guess.
DAILY LIFE
What are their eating habits? Oh boy.
Do they have any allergies? Nope.
Describe their home. Well right now,,, itâs a motel so itâs as lovely as you think.
Are they minimalist or a clutter hoarder? Minimalist.
What do they do first thing on a weekday morning? Make coffee.
What do they do on a Sunday afternoon? Read the paper with some tea.
What do they do on a Friday night? Grade student work.
What is the soft drink of choice? Root Beer.
What is their alcoholic drink of choice? Whiskey.
MISCELLANEOUS
Who is their hero? He doesnât have one.
What or who would your character dress up as for Halloween? Himself.
Are they comfortable with technology? Relatively.
If they could save one person, who would it be? It would be two, and it would be his kids.
If they could call one person for help, who would it be? He wouldnât.
What is their perception of redemption? Itâs just a concept.
What would they do if they won the lottery? Nothing different tbh. Save it for a rainy day.
Do they believe in happy endings? No.
What is their idea of perfect happiness? Heâll let you know when he finds it.
What would they ask a fortune teller? Whatâs true?
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLETCHER .
Fletcher didnât realize he was still holding onto the whisky until it was gone from his hands. It wasnât the bottle he missed, it was that his hands were empty, and what was he supposed to do with them? Because now what was stopping him from taking those very hands and raking them through this manâs hair, from roughing him up and pulling him close? Nothing, but his own terror at being seen, nothing, but his own panic at being known, and that cowardice burned more than any drink heâd had all night. His whole self had gone still when this man, this figment, had reached across to him, and for one fleeting moment, he thought maybe, but it was just a shadow on the wall, and he felt the disappointment so viscerally that he knew, already, he was done for.
If this was all in his mind, then what was stopping him from reaching out himself? The prospect, however slim, that this was real and that heâd ruin it by pushing this too far. That heâd ruin it with his bruised, aching broken heart that wanted too much and felt every breath he took like a fucking spasm of agony.
He felt as thought theyâd driven off a cliff and into a lake and the car was filling with water, but it was simply filling with everything he wasnât saying, and the silence stretched and stretched as they drove and drove down winding roads that where the trees blurred into one amorphous blob, where every house looked exactly the same, where the stop lights and traffic signs became mere suggestions rather than rules. Fletcher found himself smiling, euphoric laughter bubbling through him every time they ran a red light, every time the car drifted in and out of its lane because there was risk, there was danger, and there was no one here to fucking see it. No one here to answer their challenge to the universe, no one here to strike them down for being so bold as to think they could defy death.
Unless they were already deadâŠ
It was like resurfacing, a sudden clarity finding him again after what felt like an eternity of being stuck underwater. Fletcher sat up straighter as he recognized the house at the end of the street, the lemon tree at the corner, the playground off what felt like at the edge of the horizon. And as he realized where they were, he was struck by an idea, something that felt so important he was, finally, after all this silence, compelled to speak.
âPull over,â he said, and even he was surprised by the commanding edge to his voice. Normally, when he got drunk, the parts of himself that laced together to make Sheriff Fletcher Wright fell apart, but now, he was fucking brimming with suggestion, with the idea of what he wanted to do next, and nothing, not even this beautiful stranger could sway him from that. When the man complied, Fletcher turned to him with bright eyes and flushed cheeks and a mouth stretching wide into a Cheshire Cat smile. âCome with me.â
He was out of the car in one fluid, swaying motion, and then crossing the street without any care for oncoming traffic, heading with a singleminded purpose towards a basketball court across the way lit by flickering street lights. Fletcherâs house was right next to it, and maybe, he should have just thanked the man for the ride, closed his door, crumpled on the floor, and spent the rest of the night alone with his hands.
But he didnât stop. He couldnât. If he had it his way, this night would never end.
Fletcher didnât know if the man was still following him, didnât dare to look back to see if he was. He remembered being in high school, learning of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, and not understanding that temptation, that need to turn back. He ruined his life, ruined hers too, broke both of their hearts, and all for what? One last look at his love? He couldnât imagine it then. But nowâŠ
âI come here to think,â he said, finally turning, feeling his heart stick in his throat when the man was, in fact, there. âOr. No. I come here not to think.â And then he turned to the spot at center court where heâd lie, not because he thought the night sky was particularly captivating, but because this was the closest heâd ever come to being able to imagine what it must feel like to be in the ground. âGrass is too soft, too comfortable. Because, see, packed dirt, itâs fucking hard. Rock hard. And all of this, itâs not supposed to be comfortable. Why should it be?â
Exhaling a sharp, heady breath, he moved to the center of the court and lowered himself to the ground, the way heâd done more times than he could count. Slow, measured, the way someone would lower a coffin into a grave. And then he was lying there, his shoulders, his back, his heels, his palms, his neck, his head, pressed against the ground, and it was cold and remote, sucking up all the feeling in his chest, and for the first time that night, Fletcher felt fucking calm. Like he was back in control, like this man hadnât totally and completely knocked him off his axis. His heart steadied, instead of rattling around in his chest like some caged bird, and as his pulse slowed, he felt his head spin, the stars spinning with them.
âI should have died in Chicago,â he said, voice resonant. âIâm not supposed to be here. So. I come here to remind myself of that.â
Inky black stretched endlessly into the horizon that at this hour showed no promise of dawn, or a rising sun, or wafts of blue settling into the edges of the earth promising something brighter. Tonight it was just the two of them sitting in this car that seemed heavy with all the things unsaid between strangers that existed nowhere more than in this liminal space that swallowed them whole. It seemed driving past the brightly lit houses, and through the patches of passing street light that would illuminate their faces for just a moment, nothing around them was real. Which meant Arthur didnât need an address for the man, he just drove.
Through red hues that cast a pigmented glow flush against the otherâs cheeks, as they drive. He drives straight through any obstacle that stays in their way tonight. Theyâre leaving he tells himself, theyâre going anywhere but here. He doesnât stop, he doesnât want to. Foot flush to the flood heâd going too fast for this town, but if theyâre both already dead- it shouldnât matter.
Whiskey drenches his tongue, and warms his throat as he puts the bottle to his lips. Itâs almost half gone by the time the man in the seat beside him speaks again. And Arthur listens, to the words that soak the air of this drowning vehicle, and allows them to guide through the night. He doesnât know how long theyâve been driving in this dream, or how long ago they should have left purple hazed suburbs- but that doesnât matter. Such was the way in dreams- you drive and drive, the wheels pulling at the road and you donât listen to the rules as the gravel disappears beneath you. And you drive without a destination, without plans or fears, and yet you still end up there. Where youâre meant to be.Â
So he pulls over. And heâs left staring at that bright eyed command. The otherâs words coaxing him, with temptation on his tongue. And perhaps they werenât alive, and perhaps this other man wasnât real, nothing more than a matted mess of his drunken thoughts during this endless hour. With his smile that sunk into the sky like the moon, with the same cool warmth to it. He wants to taste the words that leave the otherâs mouth, and the honey nectar they swim with. He blinks, and the otherâs out of the car, and Arthurâs eyes are left following him before heâs drawn out of the car himself.
He follows the man that could be leading him through this sea of souls neither of them dared acknowledge. Handing the oar to the other, he let himself be guided- coaxed into the afterlife so willingly. He follows, and feels his heart still as the other turns to meet his gaze in a way that not even the possibility of crashing at the next street lights had promised.
âI always imagined freshly turned soil soft and crumbling around until you sunk into it.â Thereâs nothing else to do but lie beside the man, and look to the stars. The stars that have been staring down at them all night with hushed tones. He couldnât focus on them anymore, instead heâd admire the way they danced in the sky, in and out of focus with their tangerine glimmer. He leaves the bottle of whiskey between the both of them, resting on the concrete for the other man to grab. Arthur would think about handing it to him for a moment of time, passing the bottle and letting their hands brush just to touch something that could be real about tonight- to remember that feeling of something calloused. But he fears that his hands will find nothing but air where he expects there to be a man.
So he stares at the stars. And letâs them laugh at the sight of a man whoâs come to the basketball court at night, wondering if this is what the afterlife looks like.
âI donât think you can watch the stars when youâre six feet under. I didnât even think you could see them in Chicago.âÂ
#c: { fletcher#reckless endangerment#death tw#would you look at that everybody- he's a fucking comedian#who knew he could say more than 2 word sentances#nOT ME#also will have you know for a matter of fact it is nOT the same gif as used before#he doesn't blink in this one
16 notes
·
View notes
Photo
1 note
·
View note
Text
ROBBIE .
ânot your luck tonight, old gabeâs garage closes at 6 and itâs the only place near here. sorry.â robbie looked down at the tire. âyou mind if i take a look? iâm no expert but in my experience, majority of flats can be fixed, at least until you get to a garage.â if war hadnât found him those many years ago, if he hadnât followed in his fatherâs footsteps instead of focusing on what he really wanted to do in life, then perhaps robbie would have liked to have his own shop. where he could fix things. now he only had an old bike he kept destroying in fits of anger, and then kept trying to fix as if it would also remove the guilt from his chest.
there was something inherently peaceful in handling tools and getting his hand dirty while working on his bike, his mind turned off, focused only on parts that were broken before, that could now be fixed.
a foolish hope that it could be the the same with his head, perhaps.
without giving much option to the stranger, robbie already decided he was helping him. a minute later, he was in front of the tired, running his hand on the rubber to see if he could find a nail somewhere.
âiâm robbie, by the way.â elevating a look toward the other man, robbie only offered a smile instead of dirty hand before turning his attention back to the work before him. âi donât think iâve seen you around. youâre new or just passing through?â the tone in his voice didnât hold the same pressure it did during interrogation, interviews. just a regular meet with a stranger in the middle of nowhere. robbie did hope the man was just passing through, heâd hate to tell him how life in wade isnât like the brochure says it is.
It had been a long time since Arthur had his hands covered in grease for days on end, unable to wash it from his hands and where it stained shirts. Those few shirts he had to keep clean for he couldnât afford more. Since he was asking to be taught the difference between each part of the car with the dream that one day he could fix them himself- the time that a future where grease on his forehead, and grime staining his jeans seemed like the only option for him. A future, just within grasp.
But that wasnât him. Or he wasnât that person. Not anymore. That could have been a lifetime ago.
So when the other man knelt down before his tire, he didnât have much protest to the matter. He kneels down beside the other, as if perhaps he may be able to help. But no, those hopes were long lost to forgotten memories he didnât much care to dig up. âGod, where are my manners. Arthur, Iâve just started down at the highschool.â He offers the other a smile where the words leave his lips, he knows the next question. Itâs always the same when he says it, new. The fresh meat on the block- something thrilling to gossip about. They always ask why Wade?
He doesnât have a fitting answer, he never does. Because it was there? Heâd want to say, like it was that simple. But he can see it, on the otherâs expression. And so Arthur offers before he even gets the chance to ask, âNice change of scene out here- you know to the city.â
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLETCHER .
Maybe he was drunk. Maybe he was dead. Who fucking knew at this point? All he could focus on was this man and his words and the feelings they stirred within him, agitating every part of his heart, his mind, his body. Fletcher, heâd only been brave enough to look death in the eye once, and it had sent him back howling, screaming, burned, but this man, heâd done it. Over and over again, and he tried to get a sense of what that did to a person, tried to seek out the truth of it in the driverâs eyes, but there was justâŠnothing. And perhaps thatâs the penance you paid, the toll you gave the grim reaper. If death was the absence of life, then perhaps thatâs what he was seeing in those brown eyes, and god, he wanted to drown in them.
But the man wasnât looking at him. He was looking at the road. And all Fletcher wanted to do was for the car to swerve, for them to drive off the road, and as they careened through the air, the man would look at him and see him, and then he could be at peace.
He came back to himself at the manâs final assertion. It crawled under his skin and left him uncomfortable because it wasnât true. And wasnât that the whole point of tonight? To throw away all of the assumptions the world made about them, to just be, no matter how ugly, how warped, because the very honesty of it all would be enough to make them perfect? And so, Fletcher let out a laugh, sharp and humorless, puncturing the relative quiet of the car.
âYouâre not looking close enough, then,â he said.
Underneath the crisp white of his linen shirt, there were three puckered scars on his chest, two a palmâs distance apart on his shoulder, one off center on his abdomen. He remembered, in vivid detail, the way the whole world had tipped sideways, and heâd been lying there in the dirt, his hand pressed to his stomach, and it had taken everything left in him to raise his palm to his eyes so he could see the truth of what had happened, so he could stare at the blood staining his skin red. Because that was the whole fucking point, seeing what it was that coursed through him, feeling something to remember he was alive, truly alive, even if just for one moment, and heâd be wasting the one perfect, real moment of his life if he let it pass without experiencing every detail of it.
âI was shot,â he said. He didnât think he needed to say anymore. People without a death wish, they stay away from this kind of violence with everything they have. But god, staring down the barrel of a gun, daring the universe to smite him where he stood, rolling the dice on his own survival, god, that shit was better than heroin. They needed to bottle that kind of adrenaline and then sell it to poor fucks like him, who just wanted to live life on the razorâs edge between feeling everything and feeling absolutely nothing at all.
âI didnât get shot. Itâs not something that happened to me, passively, accidentally. Some tragedy out of my control. I put myself in front of that gun. I sought it out,â he corrected himself because it felt important, because they were being honest, and that meant even striking lies of omission from the ledger. What do you do when you outsource your own suicide, when you think youâve gotten away with sparing your friends, your family that kind of pain, and then you wake up and you made it?
Through the liquor induced haze, Fletcher realized two things: one, he had no idea where they were going. Two, he never wanted to leave this car. Because god, it felt so good to throw off all the pretense, all the agony it took him to pretend he existed, to pretend he enjoyed it. âIâve neverâ told anyone that before,â he said slowly, honestly, not with any sort of regret.
Then, the question that had plagued him all night slipped through his lips, surprising even him: âAre youâŠreal?â The edges of his brain had blurred, had been blurred for years, and ever since he came to Wade, it had only gotten worse. Waking up places heâd never been before, closing his eyes and losing time, appearing in his office, in the middle of the woods, outside of the Johnsonâs house with no memory of how he got there. It would only be fitting that his mind showed its one final party trick in the form of a man who could undo him so fully and completely without even Fletcher knowing his name. People like this person next to him, they didnât exist. Or they were like Fletcher, so well hidden that no one would ever be able to find them.
And Fletcher had found him.
If none of this was real, if they werenât going to wake up the next morning, there was nothing stopping him from pulling the manâs hands off the wheel and putting them on his heart. There was nothing stopping him from reaching out and tracing the hollow of his neck. There was no obstacle in his way preventing him from kissing this man until neither of them could breathe.
A gun in hand, Arthur can see it now. Lifeless, dangled over the floor awaiting its next order. Moonlight washes through the window, kissing the shoulders of the seen- pooling blood glistening from the crack in the door where he stood. No- he saw the gun in hand. Finger on the trigger, still warm with smoke. This oneâs pointed at a man who has his own blood pooling around him. But thereâs no gun in his hands. Thereâs grime on his hands from where heâs buried himself in the earth.Â
Ringing still swells in his ears- why are they ringing? He forgot long ago, that gun. That hand. Weathered from years, and wrinkled in the sun. The venom that dripped from itâs fingertips- heâd forgotten. Memories replaced. Guns with endless stretches of dirt, and mud on his face thatâs been there for days. And he can hear the shots, he can feel the sweat cling to his back, and sun beat down on his forehead. He thinks of blood on those around him, or his own blood staining his arms. He looks to hands, and he sees his own. Dawn would always rise, after the nights that froze his bones, and stiffened his shatters. Dawn would rise on crusted blood, and salvation.Â
Memories forgotten- replaces with others. Before inevitably, the lies built him whole and he could forget it all.Â
So why was it all so prominent tonight?
Dark hues turn to the man in the seat beside him, and he swallows the sight of him like he swallows the stars. He can feel it, the furnace inside him that boils- like he can feel the thing beating inside him. And he laughs- he canât help it through the honesty. The lingering truths they promised each other in their intoxicated hazes. âThen why do you look so alive?â Just like the laugh, the words sound hollow- echoing even as they leave his mouth like there was never substance to them to begin with. There never was.
Are you real.
Arthur takes the bottle from the manâs hands. Cooled to the touch, like the night air that brushes his cheeks and wafts the scent of sweet nectar through the car. Spilled blood and a field of flowers. He asks himself the question, hears it repeat in his head.
âI donât think I ever was.â Truth pours from the man, and it swirls into the night sky. Amber ignitions vibrant above them, twinkling in the night. But thereâs no mourning in his voice, for a man that died before he was born. Sadness was long lost to the words, they just were. âI donât think I ever will be.â And for some reason he hopes the man in the seat beside him is just the same, so perhaps they never have to leave this night.
16 notes
·
View notes