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

Deerington Inbox

DROP A LINE
howlett: (shadowy3)

[personal profile] howlett 2020-05-18 03:16 am (UTC)(link)
What Kurt saw of him wasn't uncomplimentary. He should be flattered, he supposes. But instead what he sees in the mirror now is just the void between what the younger man wants him to be and what Logan knows he is.

Passing through the town they don't head south towards the lake and the woods. They don't even turn off towards the parks department. Instead they head north east towards the church. Passing the same vast fields the two of them one trod in the desperate, futile search for Kurt.

He can almost feel that shared memory hanging over the both of them when he pulls into the church road and kills the engine. Handing Wes the empty jar he kept from the kitchen he climbs out of the truck and heads up the grave yard path. C'mon. he says, taking a cigar between his teeth. Those things only grow in one place around here
howlett: (optimistic)

[personal profile] howlett 2020-05-23 01:07 am (UTC)(link)
He can hear the movement of the younger man's hands. The telltale muffles claps and swish of palms against palms, but he knows he's too late to catch whatever Wes might be mumbling at him, and if the man isn't dragging him around for attention, it's probably not something the younger man actually intends to be known.

All of which puts a surprising little smile on Logan's face when he thinks about how familiar their habits have become in the span of so little time.

This place has a way of expediting how well you know a person. Condensing years into moments through the application of pressure.

It's a short, but slow walk through the overgrown paths of the graveyard as he scans the ground for something that finally stops him. The little silver buttons in the grass look like a few scattered coins. Slicker and wetter with some kind of silvery jelly than the dried specimens Logan kept in the fridge. "They only grow where a grave stone casts a shadow," he says like he knows there's something unnatural and morbid about that.