wwrench: <lj user=roximonoxide> (Default)
wrench | fargo tv ([personal profile] wwrench) wrote2019-08-04 12:16 am

Deerington Inbox

DROP A LINE
dividingline: commission; do not take (015)

[personal profile] dividingline 2020-03-04 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
Even if he couldn't understand the words, the conflict in Wes' expressive face is easy to see. Someone less well versed in the intricate geography of the man might back down, but Grady finds something to hope for in the flash of those green eyes and the way Wes throws his thoughts out into the space between them as if defying him to have a problem with a single one. He's not done fighting; neither of them are done fighting for what they have, and maybe they'll never be done fighting for it. Maybe that's the problem, that they don't know when to give up. That they've spent too long in the trenches and the foxholes and they can't work out how to survive somewhere that isn't cut up with gunfire.

Stubbornness runs through Grady like a seam of coal, buried deep in the places where pressure has forced the core of him apart. The red string that drifts eerily through the glass between them finds fertile ground there, reaching through those fissures until he feels a strange, stupid giddiness just to have Wes looking at him, just to be this close, just to have this chance.

Still, it's not easy. Habit makes him want to run. But there's no way out of Deerington, and he can't find it in himself to turn away. He remembers a boy standing beside a river, pushing a body into the icy water. He remembers silences and scars, negotiations, burned coffee, motel room fights and making up and arguing over the best place to get breakfast. And years, so many years.

I want you to know I'm sorry. W-E-S. His partner's name feels odd on his fingers; he's not used to saying it like this. He closes that fist and circles his chest again, and again and again, watching the reflection of himself repeat the gesture in the sunlit window. Wishing he could go back and say it to that kid he failed, to the young man who hoped for an escape. For everything. All of it. I know that's not enough. That's all I've got left.