#dugout may have still been riled up or something
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gerritcole-coded · 2 years ago
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Oh my god apparently the blue jays broadcast noticed Judge glancing at the dugout right before he homered (also right after boonie was ejected) and now twitter is losing it's goddamn mind
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ruinousrealms · 3 years ago
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Flayer
It was half past nightfall when we crossed the Rio Nuevo into Las Verdantes. Our outfit was fifteen men strong, pushing half a thousand cattle for Erlen Baymer, one of the state's lesser cattlemen. In truth he was a hard boss, a hard man who had captained a company of border raiders during the war and never tired of bragging about his service. 
A favorite story of his was the time he and his men came across a family of free black farmers in southern Kansas. Baymer had approached on horseback, riding through the fields with the self-confident swagger of a plantation overlord surveying his property. He asked the father whose plantation he had run away from, and for response the black said he had been born free. 
Now, Erlen Baymer was a devout Christian, and he knew the black race were descendants of Ham, son of Noah, and that for his transgression against God, he and his descendants were evermore cursed to servitude, to hew wood and draw water and be servants unto servants. He did of course explain this position to the black, as he ordered his men to strip him naked to find the truth of his claims. No man is born into slavery but he feels the whip, and so if he were born free, his back should be free from blemish. 
Indeed, the man's back was smooth, free from the lumpy scars of the lash. A novelty, many of his company had come up to gawk and ask questions. How did the negro know what to plant and when without any white man to tell him? How did he work the fields without a lash to urge his lazy, indolent soul? 
At length Captain Baymer ended this game and pronounced the sentence. The man was to be hung for his crimes against the Confederate States of America, those crimes being largely related to the color of his skin and the manner of his livelihood. It was understood that, if he were truly a born freeman, then surely his father and mother were somebody’s escaped property. Thus his very existence constituted the crime of theft. The children were brought back to Tennessee and dispersed among the slave markets.
The freeman’s remarkable back, Erlen Baymer had a leathersmith tan it and stitch it into a saddle. He rode that very saddle, decked out in silver dollar conchos and a rebel flag tied round the post, when we crossed the river that night in 1868.
Now, the facts of that night - I’m going to relate them to you here, plain and simple and just as they happened, like I’m some fancy New York journalist-reporter type. I grant you some of what I’m about to say may seem unbelievable. Well, there’s nothing I can do about that. I don’t got any proof, any evidence beyond what I saw that night with my own two eyes. The way Erlen Baymer died, and the things that happened to us in his trail crew before and after… I tell you boy, it’s a curse, the things I seen with these eyes. It’s what drives a man to whiskey.
The country there was flat as flapjacks, and the only place we could find to camp out of the wind was in a dried up riverbank. There we laid out our beds, cocooning ourselves in canvas sheets and wool blankets and shivering in the chill night air. The southwestern desert is hotter than a griddle all day long, but come nightfall and it’s as cold as the north pole.
Well, it was cold that night, like I said, and the wind was howling and kicking up a whole storm of dust. Me and some of the boys, those being Joe Merwin and Caul Bretton and Micah Sanchez, we took turns digging a hole in the side of the riverbank. It wasn’t like a cave, just a dirt overhang a few feet deep, with the excavated dirt piled up to protect our side from the wind.
I wouldn’t say it was the hole we dug that saved us. It sure didn’t save poor Caul, and from what I hear Micah’s still out of his mind up at one of those New England asylums. I’d say it kept us from getting noticed long enough to save our lives, for whatever that's worth.
Now we’d been seeing the makings of a dust storm in the distance for most of the afternoon. They’re common enough out here and we didn’t make much of it beyond what we’d have to do to keep the cattle from scattering. A herd of dumb heifers can scatter to the four winds during a dust-up if you’re not careful with where you lay them down.
The cows stretched out for more than a mile down the riverbed, but they wouldn’t bed down quietly. Whips of dust kept kicking up and no sooner had they sat down than they were on their hooves again, bellowing out loud.
Erlen Baymer kept riding up and down the line cursing to high heaven, kicking the sentries when he came upon them and telling them to get off their lazy god damned bean-eating asses and put the god damned cows to god damned sleep. The only effect that had was making it impossible for any of us to get sleep - But that probably saved us.
It was so dusty at that point that when dark fell there wasn’t a moon nor a star to be seen. A man could just see the dots of cattle guards’ lanterns like the windows of distant farmsteads. Weren’t no use keeping your eyes open, the wind kept kicking the stinging dust up and there weren’t anything to see anyways. I pulled my bandana up over my nose and pushed the brim of my hat down over my eyes and tried to get some shuteye.
I might even have caught a wink of sleep. The cattle down at the far end of the line were getting riled up, bellowing and braying into the night, and that got the whole herd nervous. A nervous longhorner is a dangerous longhorner, and a whole herd of nervous longhorners is a stampede waiting to happen. Joe Merwin went out to see what was the matter and lend a hand if need be. That left just the three of us.
The screaming started soon after. I think it was Tadd Murfree, but from the sound it was hard to tell whose voice it was. There are sounds and intonations particular to men and sounds and intonations particular to animals, and only in the extremity of fear, agony or ecstasy can one make the sounds of another. I don’t think poor Tadd was in ecstasy that night.
More screams started up, and the horses neighing, and the braying and bellowing filled the night air with a mad cacophony. I wager nobody’s ever heard a sound like that before, that of half a thousand screaming and panicking cattle. The hoofbeats were like thunder, like cannonfire, like a thousand drummers pounding madly out of time.
The three of us huddled at the back of our shallow hole in the edge of the riverbank, wishing we’d dug in even deeper and almost thankful Joe Merwin wasn’t here, because he was a big man and there wouldn’t have been room to hide.
I had a small trail lantern whose flickering light we used to play cards. It took five tries to get a match lit, my hands were shaking so much. It lit up our little hole just fine; I saw Micah had his revolver out, and his knuckles were white around the oakwood grip.
“Put that thing away, Micah, do you mean to shoot something?”
“I intend to be ready,” He said, which was reasonable enough.
I crawled to the entrance of the hole. As we were digging we piled the dirt up at the entrance to serve as a wind-break while we slept. I crawled up to it like a trench’s parapet and peered over with my little lamp. It didn’t illuminate much, but in its glow I could see a rush of cattle, a torrent of bovinity running full-tilt down the length of the riverbed. A lot of the animals had raw bloody wounds, some so flayed they appeared to be covered in red patches like a hellishly perverse Holstein.
These animals were panicking for a reason, fleeing some unknown predator, but what on God’s earth it could be I had no idea. Suddenly a cow fell headlong into the side of the embankment near us, sending a shower of dirt down from the roof of our little dugout. It kept trying to get up, but couldn’t; And when it rolled over I could see one whole side of its hip had been laid open and the bloody pink bone was visible. Well, I put the poor bellowing beast out of its misery and hurled my dinner over the side of the dirt heap.
And you see, that’s when Erlen Baymer rode past us. God, if the sight don’t haunt me. I once seen a drawing of the Third Horseman, Famine, a rotting man riding atop a rotting stallion. That’s what I saw. That’s the scene I’ve got to describe to you, to make you understand why I can’t sleep at night no more.
The horse looked like it had been dead and rotting for a week. It had hardly a hair of fur left on its body, and the skin… It looked like somebody had taken a cheese grater to the poor beast. Through flapping bits of flesh I saw muscles moving like an accursed anatomical flipbook. The horse’s jaw was hanging on by a thread of tendon and it was screaming, just screaming with that stump of a tongue hanging out.
The poor girl had been beautiful, just absolutely beautiful, with a black coat that shone like oil in the sunlight. Thinking back on it now I wish I’d have drawn my pistol and put an end to the poor thing, but at the time I was too shocked to do anything but watch as it thundered past, carrying its shrieking, flailing load.
Erlen Baymer was naked as Adam in Eden, and it was plain whatever was happening to the horse was occurring to him as well. He was flailing like a man possessed, slapping at himself as if desperately beating out flames; There were no flames, just raw red meat that spurted every time he touched it. He raised his arm and I caught a glimpse of the frayed ends of muscles poking through a bicep.
Something fell with a wet thud near our little hollow, and leaning over just slightly with the lantern, I saw a withered human leg severed at the knee, as if the joint had been so weakened it simply fell off. It seemed to be writhing as if covered by a hundred thousand ravenous little insects, methodically stripping it down to the bone before my very eyes. It was wearing one of Erlen Baymer’s fancy gatorskin ropers. Once the flesh was gone, the carnivorous beasties went to work eating the leather of the boot, anything fleshy enough to be consumed, till all that remained were bones and a silver spur.
I crawled back in the hole, barely able to process what I had just seen. “Alright, boys, what in the hell do we do?” I asked, and Micah Sanchez said what we three all were thinking - Make a run for the horses.
Well, you didn’t have to tell us twice. We three all crawled up to the opening, and Micah and Caul took off at a full tilt. I stayed behind a second - I’d just glanced at the body of the cow beside our dugout. It had been picked to the bone.
Just as I scrambled to my feet, Caul fell and started screaming.
“No! God, no!” Caul frantically started beating at the lower hem of his pant-legs. We didn’t know what in the hell was happening; Micah rushed over with the lamp and pulled up his trouser leg. Micah screamed and dropped the lantern, bringing the infernal night down around us once more. Caul let out a kind of a long drawn-out moan, with notes of fear, sadness and resignation. At the time what it reminded me of, more than anything, was a deer that’s gotten itself trapped in some crevasse it can’t get out, and the more it struggles the more stuck it gets, till it’s exhausted itself and all it can do is bray and wait to die.
A gunshot lit up the darkness for a moment, and the afterimage stayed in my eyes for a long time, like looking too long into a fire. Caul’s body slumped down almost casually, but the upper part of his head sprayed across the sand. I heard Micah’s running footsteps and his heavy gasping breath, and he thudded down next to me and skittered like a rat into our little safe haven.
“Flies!” Micah’s fingertips dug into my shoulders like blades, his dirty breath blowing in my face, “It’s flies! Must be millions of them! They were eating him right up! Cleaned his ankles down to the bone, I’m telling you!”
I told him to shut up.
“That’s why he fell, there weren’t nothing holding his foot bones to his leg!”
Maybe the reader will judge me for what I did next. I hope you’ll take into account the things I’d seen, and the stress I was under at the time. Micah was raving mad, clenching me for dear life like a survivor of a shipwreck clinging to a broken mast. I’d just seen him blow a man’s brains out - Though thinking back to it, he may have been right. It would have been cruel to leave him to be eaten alive, and if Micah had tried dragging him back, he’d have brought the carnivorous flies with him. He put him out of his misery as you would an old cow. But at that time I was still in shock, and the only thought that came to mind was of Caul Bretten, whom I hardly knew, but with whom I’d shared campfires and kettles of coffee, and whose brains were steaming in the cool desert night.
Thinking only of justice, I reached for my lantern and brought it down on Micah’s head, extinguishing the light and silencing his ramblings. I didn’t know whether or not I’d killed him. He was quiet. We lay there together a long time. I must have nodded off and woken several times. At one point, I woke to see Abraham Lincoln delivering the Gettysburg Address in the corner of our cave. Again I woke, this time to see a skinless and eyeless cow wandering blind in the dim pre-dawn light. It walked past absolutely silently.
When morning came, the desert was still and not a thing moved. The sun was well up in the sky before I dared move. I was caked in dust from head to toe, cracking and falling as I stirred.
Micah’s face was red and my first thought, as the events of the night came rushing back to me, was that he too was being consumed alive by those unstoppably ravenous insects. But no; My lantern blow had split his scalp and dry blood painted his face red as an Apache warrior. He was still breathing softly, so I left him there and took a gander outside.
The dry riverbed at first seemed to be decorated with a vast elaborate network of ice sculptures, gleaming a blinding white in the sun. These were the bones of cattle and cattlemen, five hundred dead heifers stripped of skin and meat and life. A lot of them had broken and ran, and their bones shone white in the distant desert sand. Clambering up the slope, the impression one got was of an overflowing river turned to ice in the blink of an eye, as if by magic.
Here and there the bones of the sentries. I recognized Eustace Bagge from his cigarette case. The leather had been eaten away, but the copper badge bearing the name of the regiment he served in the war was still perfect.
Two or three miles down, laying near some scrub was the skeleton of a horse surrounded by silver dollar conchos. I picked one up, turned it over; It could only be Erlen Baymer’s horse and saddle. The saddle, however, was gone but for the metal pegs that held it together. The freedman’s dark skin, that nightmarish piece of leatherwork, had been completely eaten away by the swarm.
The man himself had crawled away from his dead horse and left a trail of bones. He lost a lot more than the one leg; Toe and finger bones poked from the sand like pebbles, and the larger ones, a femur, most of a hand and the arm up to the elbow. I found gold teeth, and his revolver with the tacks that had held together the holster.
A bit further on I found Erlen Baymer. I turned and went back down the riverbank.
Micah had woken up and I found him wandering dazed and confused amongst the skeletons. I spoke to him but he didn’t reply; He never said a word to me again, and from what I’ve heard those New England brain-doctors haven’t gotten him talking. There was something wrong with his eyes. I couldn’t tell you what. He just kept staring past me.
He followed me without resistance. We followed the riverbed. We must have walked ten miles the first day and ten miles the next. The whole time we were stepping around skeletons. A herd can go surprisingly far in panic; The only reason they hadn’t gotten farther was, well, they were being eaten alive at the time.
The sun was our enemy. We had our canteens; I kept pouring little slips down Micah’s mouth, worried he’d choke but even more worried he’d die of thirst. At some point the brim started falling off my hat and letting sunlight hit my forehead, searing the skin red and raw.
Round noon of the third day, we came to an old covered bridge where we took shelter from the sun for a while, then started out along the road. After two and a half days walking, we were near dead. I had to pull Micah along, but he’d only move at a snail’s pace. I was terrified that he’d eventually fall down and just refuse to get back up; It’d be the end for him, and my own couldn’t be far away.
And then, as if by magic, a carriage appeared. One moment we were walking and then, the sound and smell of horses and a voice crying out in Spanish, “Quitate de en medio, idiotas!”
Well, I spoke a peck of Spanish, just enough for him to understand that we were in trouble, and the kind old man stepped down and helped me load Micah into the back, building a little bed for him out of bags of corn, and setting up a tarp to keep him out of the sun.
We rode to a hacienda named Soledad El Aquelarre, and the women bathed us and fed us and fussed over poor Micah. There was a nunnery not far away and the old man sent for the holy sisters to tend his needs, but beyond keeping him fed and cleaning up after him, there was little they could do.
I never told him a word of what happened. My lack of Spanish helped in that respect; Whenever he asked, I could pretend not to understand. He was kind, too kind for the likes of us, and I do feel guilty about lying to him, but I didn’t think he could comprehend what we’d been through, let alone understand. I barely could, and as I lay there day after day I got to wondering if the whole thing hadn’t been some sort of insane dream. I could see the workers in the fields through my window and beyond them the bone white desert stretched out gleaming, a thousand miles of dust to the gulf of Mexico.
One night, however, I was visited in my room by one of the sisters. She spoke good English and introduced herself as Sister Clarita. She was one of the sisters tending to Micah. She didn’t ask me what had happened, because she already knew. There were stories in this region going back centuries, of caravans going missing in the desert night, and by light of day all that are found are the polished white bones. The monastery library held many such reports going back to the days of the conquistadors. Sister Clarita thought it must have been going on a lot longer; The native tribes shunned this entire area, considering it an unclean place to visit and avoiding the entire hundred-mile stretch of desert as we Americans avoid the cesspit or the slums.
There were other books, too. Books on biology and entomology, and the evolution and adaptation of species. Sister Clarita suggested that a species of small insect, like the tiny mites and fleas that live among grains of sand and are so small as to be almost indistinguishable, may have become adapted, over many centuries, to the consumption of flesh. That such a diet would cause changes in the bodies of the insects making them more adept at catching their prey; Perhaps their mandibles had developed a razor’s edge for slicing off bits of flesh. Or maybe they coated their victims in digestive acid and slurped up the liquified flesh. Sister Clarita knew of several insects that consumed their prey in just such a manner, though none that she knew had ever gone after so large a prey as a man or a cow.
“But Sister, if these really are man-eating insects, why do they stay out here in the desert? Every animal migrates toward its food source; These things could strip a town clean of flesh overnight! Why aren’t they swarming through the cities, just… Everywhere?”
“Perhaps they just like the weather here,” Sister Clarita said and kissed her rosary.
After a week of recovery, I felt well enough to travel. I collected Micah from the sisters, who protested, but I thought if anyone could help him it would be at one of those new asylums up in New England. The old man took us as far as the train station in Las Friolero del Resol, and there he bade us goodbye.
Two days later we were back in Texas. First thing I went to the barber to shave off the wild beard I’d grown. Then I walked into the nearest sheriff’s office to report the fate of the Erlen Baymer Cattle Drive.
Well, they didn’t believe a word of what I told them and locked me and Micah up for murder. To hear them tell it, the two of us got up one night and slit everybody’s throats. Didn’t matter to them what I said, nor the state Micah was in; They left us to rot six weeks before the circuit judge came ‘round to pronounce the sentence.
He had expected an open-and-shut murder case; When we were brought to stand before him, he saw my sleepless eyes and the empty shell of a man that was Micah. He listened to my story silently, nodding occasionally for me to continue, and when it was done he pronounced the sentence.
“I, Judge Howard Lorbbock of the Great State of Texas, do hereby declare these two men to be mentally insane. No doubt they were driven mad by the ordeal they suffered, of crossing the desert after their cattle drive was destroyed by Apaches.”
There weren’t any damn Apaches in that part of Mexico, but I kept my mouth shut. The sheriff was making enough noise as it was, imploring the judge that “What the people of this town need to see is a good old fashioned hanging!”
Well, we were sent to Houston for treatment. Micah was considered such a specialty case that he was sent up north to New England, to the asylum in some town called Arkham. 
I stayed behind at the Houston madhouse. The medicine they gave me made me sleep, but nothing can stop the dreams. When I close my eyes, all I can see are Erlen Baymer’s lidless eyeballs rolling round and round in his red skull-face.
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defenselesswriter · 6 years ago
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Sunshine Riptide ch. 3
i’ll update chapter one in a min so it’ll have all the links to previous chapters. but you can find this on ao3 here and chapter one is here... enjoy!
Spring training games come up faster than Stiles expected. Suddenly, he’s on the mound looking across the field at Danny in his mask. His hands are shaking he’s so nervous. It may not be an actual game yet, but still. How he performs at these games will determine the line up for real games.
He takes a deep breath to center himself, adjusting his hat methodically. He watches Danny’s fingers signal out their code, and then he throws a fastball that lands right in Danny’s mitt. Strike.
It’s a good way to start the game. After a couple innings, another pitcher replaces him, one that Stiles doesn’t know too well. He sits in the dugout next to Boyd and Derek, leaning back.
“Good job,” Derek tells him. “You only gave up one run.”
“Not bad for your first game,” Boyd agrees.
“Thanks, guys,” Stiles says, his mind still going over what he could do better, what he needs to work on more. His curveball could use some work.
He has to up his game if he wants to be kept in the majors. As a pitcher, there’s an even bigger chance that if he isn’t performing well enough that he’ll be sent back to AAA. He really doesn’t want that to happen, so he has to start training harder.
After the game and talking with the coaches, they all start to leave the field. Stiles catches up with Derek as he’s leaving.
“Derek!” he calls out.
Derek turns around to look at him curiously.
“I was wondering...could you help me with my curveball?” Stiles asks. “You have the best curveball in the MLB, so who better to get tips from?”
Derek ducks his head and shrugs. “I don’t have the best curveball...”
“You do,” Stiles says enthusiastically. “I’ve been following your career since you left Beacon Hills.”
Derek looks confused. “No one knows that. I’ve only ever said I’m from a small town in California.”
“Stilinski,” Stiles reminds him.
Derek’s eyes widen, and he almost gasps. “You’re the sheriff’s kid?”
“Yeah,” Stiles says, not thrilled with the word ‘kid’.
At this point they’ve walked all the way to Derek’s black camaro. Derek unlocks the door and leans his arm against the roof of the car. “You want help with your curveball?”
“Please,” Stiles practically begs. He will beg if that’s what Derek wants.
Derek nods. “Only because you’re the sheriff’s kid. Meet me here at six.”
“Six?” Stiles chokes on his own spit out of surprise.
“Six,” Derek reiterates.
Stiles nods. “I’ll be here.”
“See you then.”
*
Stiles is at the field before six, chugging coffee, black. It’s not his preferred way of drinking coffee. Usually, he adds milk and sugar, but that’s not healthy. Plus, too much sugar gets him riled up, and he doesn’t need to be riled up right now. He just needs to be awake and focused enough to not ogle Derek in his baseball pants.
Derek shows up a few minutes before six, and they walk into the locker room together. “So tell me more about you following my career,” Derek says when he takes off his shirt.
Stiles immediately looks away and focuses on getting his stuff ready. “Uh, my dad’s a huge fan. He just liked seeing someone from Beacon Hills be recognized for something good, you know?”
“I asked about you, not your dad.”
“I liked seeing someone from Beacon Hills get to the majors,” Stiles says, taking his shirt off. “You were kind of my motivation and inspiration. You showed me I could do it.”
Derek doesn’t say anything, so after Stiles gets his Dbacks shirt on, he looks at Derek, who is already looking back. There’s something in Derek’s eyes that Stiles can’t name.
“That...is the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me,” Derek says quietly.
“Well, it’s that plus you know, I’m madly in love with you,” Stiles jokes because he has to joke about it or he’ll really spill the beans.
Derek’s eyebrows raise in shock, but then he sees Stiles’ smile. He rolls his eyes, shaking his head, but he’s smiling too. “You’re an idiot.”
“An idiot you’re gonna help,” Stiles reminds him.
Derek nods. “Yup. Let’s get out there.”
Stiles stands at the mound, and Derek plays catcher, calling out tips with each throw. Slowly, Stiles’ curveball starts to improve. Not a lot because it’s only been thirty minutes, but enough that Stiles can see the difference.
Derek catches the ball one last time, stands up, and jogs over to Stiles. He pats Stiles on the shoulder. “Good job.”
Stiles is dying inside at the touch and the compliment. “Thanks,” he says, sounding tired, which he is.
Derek slides his hand off Stiles’ shoulder, and it almost feels lingering, but that’s definitely Stiles’ imagination.
Stiles rolls his shoulders and his neck as they walk back to the locker room where everyone else is by now. Danny and Boyd greet Derek when he walks in and then both of them look surprised to see Stiles.
“You’re here early, rookie,” Boyd comments.
Stiles shrugs. “Derek helped me with my curveball.”
“Yeah?” Danny says. “Bet he helped you put your wrist into it.” For some reason, Boyd and Danny start laughing.
“I missed something,” Stiles says slowly.
“You missed nothing,” Derek grumbles, glaring at the two other men, shoulder checking Boyd as he walks by.
Stiles definitely missed something, but no one is gonna tell him what so he just walks to the gym instead. He walks slowly on the treadmill to warm up and then works up to a jog. He increases the incline and jogs faster. He was known for how fast he could run the bases in AAA, and he wants to maintain that reputation.
After thirty minutes, the pitching trainer tells him he has five minutes to cool down and be on the field, so Stiles slows down. His arm is already sore, but he has to keep practicing. Fortunately, it’s Thursday, and he’ll be off for three days soon. He just has to make it through today.
And he does. Barely.
*
Stiles stands in the shower, under the spray for a very long time. The hot water helps relax his sore muscles, and he’ll definitely have to get a massage soon, especially on his right arm.
When he gets out of the showers, Derek is the only one left in the locker room. Stiles stops in the doorway while Derek looks up. There’s a towel covering Stiles’ crotch and thighs, but he feels so exposed for some reason. Derek’s eyes flick down and up almost imperceptibly quick, before he looks away.  
Stiles feels flustered as he walks towards his locker and gets his clothes on. When he’s done, Derek is waiting by the door.
“What’s up?” Stiles asks because Derek is staring at him again.
“Uh,” Derek says then looks down. “We’re having a game night at my place tomorrow night. There will be no beer, but it should be fun.”
“What kind of games?” Stiles asks, getting his hopes up that Derek is trying to invite him to game night.
“Board games,” Derek answers, looking back up. “Maybe some card games, but I take my collection of board games almost everywhere. It’s a good way to unwind, especially during the stress of the season.”
Stiles nods, agreeing with Derek. “What time?”
“I’m not sure yet. I’ll text you?” Derek looks almost nervous, which Stiles didn’t know was possible.
“Do you have my number?” Stiles is sure he doesn’t because Stiles doesn’t have Derek’s.
Derek shakes his head and takes a step closer, handing Stiles his phone. “I know you’re in love with me and all, so I trust that you won’t give my number out.”
“I won’t,” Stiles immediately promises as he gingerly takes Derek’s phone. He inputs his number then hands it back. “I would never ruin my chance at game night. Or with you.” He smirks and winks at Derek.
Derek fumbles with the phone and almost drops it before clearing his throat. “Yeah, uh. Right. So I’ll see you tomorrow.”
“See you.” They walk out together and then part ways to get to their cars.
Stiles can’t believe he’s going to see Derek Hale’s place tomorrow night. Stiles can’t believe Derek Hale himself invited him. Man, he is really living the life.
If only Derek was gay and in love with Stiles too.
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