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Sleepy Tani Needs A Nap

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..............#d19a73 ....|..... outfit .....|..... black lantern apothecary ............ #565a8f ....|..... outfit .....|..... black lantern apothecary ..............


Something was breathing in the dark.

The sound pulled unevenly through the house, damp and ragged and wet. The sound drifted unevenly through the room like lungs struggling to fill somewhere just beyond her line of sight, and each breath seemed to drag the air cooler around her. Arabella stood barefoot against wooden floorboards with cold pressing through the soles of her feet and the taste of copper settling against the back of her tongue. The bedroom around her flickered weakly beneath a dying candle set somewhere behind her shoulder, its amber glow barely reaching the open doorway ahead. Beyond it stretched a narrow hallway swallowed in shadow, the wallpaper softening and tightening in slow pulses that made the entire house feel faintly alive.

Each breath she took felt shallow, strained like she was suddenly in a higher elevation than she had been only a moment ago. The fine hairs along the back of her neck prickled hard enough to ache beneath the sensation of being watched. She became aware of the woman gradually, a pale shape standing motionless at the far end of the hallway where the darkness thickened deepest. Arabella’s mind reached for the simplest explanation immediately: a mirror.

The resemblance felt too exact for anything else. Red hair spilled over slender shoulders in tangled waves. The angle of her jaw, the shape of her mouth, even the rigid set of her posture belonged unmistakably to Arabella herself. The woman stood perfectly still for several long seconds before slowly tilting her head to one side, and a sickening chill slid through Arabella when her own neck followed the motion a heartbeat later without permission.

The candle sputtered sharply behind her, and the woman looked wrong now that Arabella could truly see her. Dirt streaked across pale skin in smeared lines while old blood cracked darkly against the fabric of a thin white slip hanging from her shoulders. Terror hollowed her face in a way that sharpened every feature beneath it. Her eyes glistened too brightly. Her breathing looked shallow and frantic. She kept glancing over her shoulder toward the door behind her like something waited just beyond sight, close enough that she could feel it breathing against the back of her neck.

The hallway seemed deeper now. It stretched far beyond the dimensions the house should have allowed, disappearing into a suffocating dark that rolled slowly along the floorboards in thick currents. Arabella could hear stone grinding somewhere below her feet, low and heavy, each slow shift vibrating faintly through the walls around her. The air grew colder with every passing second until her lungs began to ache from it. Sweat dampened the back of her neck despite the cold. She took a small, tentative step closer, and the floorboard beneath her creaked. The woman at the end of the hallway stiffened violently at the sound, but she had not moved when Arabella did.

Then she looked directly at her, eyes connecting. Her lips moved quickly now, forming words Arabella couldn’t hear. The desperation in her face landed harder than panic ever could. Arabella stepped forward again before realizing she meant to, her pulse thundering painfully through her chest as the shadows behind the woman shifted and thickened. Something moved there. Large enough to distort the darkness around it. The candlelight dimmed further until the hallway dissolved almost entirely into black, leaving only the woman’s pale face still visible at the end of it. She raised one shaking hand suddenly and slammed it hard against the wall beside her, and she only had the briefest moment to glimpse some sort of ancient sigil drawn on the wall in what looked to be blood and then—

The candle went out.

Darkness crashed through the room all at once. Arabella jerked backward blindly as cold swept over her skin in a violent wave, thick enough that it felt almost physical. The house groaned around her. Another breath sounded directly beside her ear this time, deep and grotesquely damp and impossibly close. Panic surged hot through her body as something brushed lightly along the back of her neck. She squeezed her eyes shut hard enough to hurt while the sound of grinding stone swelled louder beneath the earth below, and somewhere inside the dark, something exhaled slowly into her ear like it had finally found her.

Arabella jerked awake hard enough that the mattress springs groaned beneath her. For one disorienting moment she simply stared, breath shallow and pulse still hammering violently from the nightmare as unfamiliar walls swam slowly into focus around her. Cheap wood paneling stretched across the motel room in dark amber strips stained by age and cigarette smoke, while thin morning light filtered weakly through sheer curtains that stirred faintly beside the window unit humming beneath them. The room smelled faintly of old coffee and overused detergent. Somewhere outside came the muffled sounds of car doors slamming and distant laughter drifting through the parking lot below, the town already awake and moving beneath the gray October morning as they prepared for their annual Halloween festivities. Then memory settled heavily back into place. Pine Ridge. The motel. Arriving sometime after four in the morning exhausted enough to barely remember checking in.

A soft weight shifted against her ribs. Bramblebit blinked up at her from where he had curled himself tightly against her side during the night, yellow eyes narrowed in sleepy irritation at the abrupt movement. His black fur looked almost blue beneath the washed-out morning light spilling across the bedspread. She exhaled shakily and leaned down instinctively, pressing a lingering kiss against the top of his head while her fingers smoothed slowly along the length of his spine. The familiar warmth and scent of him grounded her far more effectively than logic ever could.

Home rose sharply in her chest at the feeling of him beneath her hands, followed almost immediately by the hollow ache that now accompanied the thought of it. Her small house back in Connecticut already felt strangely distant in her memory, as though she had crossed much farther than state lines to get here.

The shower barely stayed warm long enough for her to wash the sweat from her skin. Pipes rattled somewhere deep within the walls while weak water pressure sputtered unevenly overhead, and by the time she stepped back into the motel room the mirrors had already fogged at the edges from lingering steam. Pine Ridge seemed colder than she had prepared herself for. Last night’s drive through the mountains had left the cold settled deep into her bones, and after checking the weather app on her phone she found little comfort in the day ahead: fifty-two degrees, heavy clouds, heavy wind rolling in by afternoon.

Arabella stood staring into her open suitcase for several long moments before finally dressing practically instead of for the holiday. Dark brown corduroy trousers sat high against her waist beneath a fitted ribbed sweater the color of bitter coffee, while a worn leather satchel rested comfortably against her hip once she slung it over her shoulder. She braided her long red hair loosely down her back afterward, fingers working automatically through damp strands until the braid settled against her waist.

By the time she finished feeding Bramblebit and refilling his water dish, the town outside had grown louder. Arabella paused briefly at the motel door before stepping outside, her fingers tightening unconsciously around the strap of her bag as cold mountain wind slipped immediately beneath the fabric of her sweater. The motel wrapped around a narrow parking lot lined with faded white paint and cracked asphalt, its flickering vacancy sign buzzing softly near the roadside.

Everything about the place felt worn thin by time. Rust climbed the railings outside the second-floor walkway, and somewhere nearby came the hollow metallic clatter of an ice machine struggling to stay alive. Arabella glanced once toward the dark line of pine forest stretching beyond the town below before starting toward the street, unease from the dream still sitting quietly beneath her ribs, though the memory of it was already slipping away.
_______________________________________________

Arabella winced faintly as she eased her Bronco into a parking spot along Main Street, the vehicle looking painfully out of place beside the line of older trucks and weathered sedans crowding the curb. Directly ahead of her sat an old Chevy pickup half-swallowed in rust and streaked in dried mud, the sort of truck that looked as though it had belonged to the town longer than some of the buildings had. Her own vehicle gleamed darkly beneath the cloudy morning light by comparison, too new, too clean, and much too expensive. She lingered behind the steering wheel for a moment after killing the engine, fingers tightening briefly against the leather as unease settled low in her stomach. It was ridiculous. No one cared that she was here. Outside, half the town seemed busy stringing faded orange garlands and paper ghosts around wrought iron lamp posts while old speakers somewhere down the block crackled out muffled Halloween music beneath the wind.

Arabella pushed the door open and slipped out into the cold. Wind immediately caught loose strands of red hair around her face while she hauled the heavy leather satchel over her shoulder and shoved the Bronco door shut with her hip. The weight of the books inside dragged uncomfortably against her side as she glanced once up and down Main Street, still struggling to shake the feeling that she had stepped sideways into another decade the moment she crossed into Pine Ridge. Older trucks lined the curb beneath wrought iron lamp posts draped in faded Halloween garlands, and nearly every storefront looked worn smooth by time and mountain weather alike. Her own Bronco sat among them like something intrusive and polished and painfully temporary.

Her eyes drifted toward a nearby wooden utility pole layered thick with staples, rusted nails, and years worth of weathered paper. Fresh tape flapped softly against the wood in the wind. A missing persons poster stared back at her beneath the gray morning light, the smiling blonde girl on it far too young for the hollow feeling that immediately settled in Arabella’s stomach. Clare Ann. Twenty years old. Medium-length honey blonde hair tangled loosely around sun-browned skin, soft bangs swept across her forehead, bright eyes nearly hidden by the warmth of her smile. The photograph looked candid, taken outside somewhere rural with open fields stretching behind her while wind caught strands of hair across her face. She looked vibrant, familiar somehow in the deeply human way all missing persons posters did once someone reduced a life into a single smiling photograph and a date beneath it. Missing since August 5th, 2026.

The corners of the poster curled slightly where rain had already gotten to it. Beneath Clare’s face, older flyers remained partially buried beneath newer ones, fragments of names and photographs still visible where time and weather had failed to fully strip them away. Someone had torn several others down entirely at some point, leaving only ragged scraps of paper trembling around deeply embedded nails near the base of the pole. Damp white fragments littered the sidewalk below like dead leaves. Arabella frowned faintly, cold creeping deeper beneath her sweater as another gust of mountain wind swept through the street. The unease she’d been carrying since arriving tightened quietly beneath her ribs again. Missing people. More than one, apparently.

Her fingers curled harder against the satchel strap while she looked away from the pole and toward the black-painted brick storefront tucked between two older buildings. It looked like it had once been an old bank before someone hollowed it out and filled it with candlelight and old herbs instead. BLACK LANTERN APOTHECARY stretched across the sign overhead in faded gold lettering, warm amber light glowing softly through the windows against the dreary morning around it. Then she felt it again, eyes on her. A man across the street was watching her. Arabella glanced up instinctively and found him standing beside the hardware store, cigarette hanging loose between two fingers while smoke curled lazily into the cold air around him. He wasn’t staring in an aggressive way. If anything, he looked mildly curious. That somehow made it worse. Heat crawled faintly up Arabella’s neck anyway beneath the weight of being visibly unfamiliar in a town that clearly noticed outsiders quickly. She turned away before he could catch her looking back and hurried down the sidewalk faster than she intended, boots scraping softly against damp pavement while the wind tugged at her hair.

The bell above the door gave a soft chiming note as she stepped inside. Warmth wrapped around her almost immediately, carrying the thick familiar scent of dried sage, pine resin, old parchment, incense smoke, and something darker beneath it all that reminded her faintly of rain-soaked earth. The smell landed hard enough in her chest to ache. It smelled like her mother’s study late at night, like afternoons spent sitting cross-legged beside her great-grandmother while old books lay open across the kitchen table. Arabella stood still for several long seconds while her eyes adjusted to the dim amber lighting spilling softly across the shop. Dried herbs hung bundled from dark wooden beams overhead while towering apothecary cabinets lined the walls beneath bookshelves stretching nearly to the ceiling. Glass jars, candles, crystals, tarot decks, and scattered curiosities crowded nearly every surface near the front of the store, arranged carefully enough to feel intentional rather than cluttered. Somewhere deeper within the building came the soft rustle of wings.

A black cat lounged lazily across the lowered counter near the back steps, yellow eyes half-lidded as it watched her from beneath the hanging glow of brass lantern lights. Red-winged blackbirds fluttered somewhere higher overhead between shelves and exposed rafters, their claws clicking softly against wood before settling again. Beyond the counter, partially hidden by strands of black beads and sheer dark fabric, Arabella caught sight of the massive circular bank vault door. Her fingers tightened anxiously against the satchel strap resting beneath her hand while she took a few tentative steps farther inside, eyes lingering across old books and labeled drawers and dried flowers hanging upside down from ceiling hooks.

The cat lifted its head slightly as she hesitated, and despite herself Arabella softened immediately at the sight of it, looking momentarily tempted to pause and scratch behind its ears. Instead she hesitated near the doorway another second too long before glancing back toward the street outside, chewing lightly against her bottom lip. This was ridiculous. She should have gone directly to the sheriff's office, or called Noah, instead of wandering into an occult shop on the off chance someone knew anything about her great great great great great great grandmother who, apparently, fancied herself a witch.

Deep in the shop, hidden somewhere out of sight beyond lined bookshelves and velvet curtains, a woman sang out, "Just a moment, dear." The voice didn’t sound like a shopkeeper greeting a customer, but a mother welcoming home a child or an old friend that had been gone far too long. It was like a sweater on a crisp fall morning, warm enough to comfort but not crowding or stifling. And beneath the effortless kindness was an authority that was not demanded or taken, but earned, wise and patient beyond her years.

Before a response could be a given, the sharp whistle of a kettle cut through the quiet peace of the shop. It sent startled blackbirds fluttering about the rafters, while the cat lounging along the counter remained unbothered, only managing a yawn and an adjustment of his head before returning to his daily nap. The noise did not last long, deft hands were poised and ready to silence it, ending the cry just as quickly as it came. The sound reverberated off the walls like an echo, ringing in their ears as the serenity crept back in, settling in the soft groan of old floorboards, the creak of brass lanterns swaying, and the distant trickle of steaming water from a kettle.

A moment or two passed as if the quiet surrender of the shop had never been interrupted in the first place. Then came the sharp tap of thick heels against uneven wood in a steady, unhurried rhythm. Bamboo beads rattled and clicked together as a polished hand swept them aside and a figure emerged from the backroom. She was tall and slender, carrying herself with a regalness that seemed almost out of place in a tiny occult shop in a town like Pine Ridge. Pleated black trousers cinched at her waist and swayed around the ankle of her pointed leather boots. A soft clink similar to the sound of rattling keys preceded her. Crystals and gemstones hung from her belt by silver chains, bouncing off her thigh with every step, colliding into each other like a personal windchime.

The woman slowly ascended the small staircase that led from the heart of the shop up to the elevated, more tourist focused, entrance area. Slender fingers adorned in a polish that matched the rich maroon of her coat curled around the porcelain handle of a teacup. Her other hand held a small string, rising and falling with a timeless patience as she steeped the teabag. Steam billowed from the cup, breaking against the woman’s sharp jaw. Dark hazel eyes looked out from beneath raven hair that had slipped from where it had been pinned back out of her face. A warm and welcoming smile curled freely at the corners of her mouth. "Apologies for your wait. A day like this calls for a warm cup of tea," she mused like one would with a friend. "How can I help you?"

Arabella had been seconds away from leaving. The instinct had risen sharp and sudden the longer she stood near the entrance, fingers curled tightly around the strap of her satchel while unease climbed steadily beneath her ribs. The shop felt too familiar in ways she couldn’t comfortably explain to herself. The smell of herbs and parchment. The low creak of old wood settling beneath unseen footsteps somewhere deeper within the building. Even the warmth of the space reminded her painfully of evenings spent tucked inside her mother’s study while candlelight flickered across old books and steaming mugs of tea. Then the woman’s voice drifted through the shop, soft as wool pulled fresh from a dryer, and something inside Arabella loosened before she could stop it. She stayed rooted to the floor instead of fleeing back out into the cold.

Her attention wandered nervously across shelves lined in crystals and hanging herbs until movement drew her gaze downward again. The woman emerging from behind the velvet curtains carried herself with the sort of quiet grace that made the cramped occult shop feel momentarily too small to contain her. Dark hair framed sharp, elegant features while steam curled softly around the line of her jaw from the teacup resting in her hand. Silver jewelry wound delicately along one ear in serpent-like curves that caught the light each time she moved. For one strange second Arabella found herself thinking the woman looked less like a shopkeeper and more like someone pulled directly from the pages of an old myth. The feeling unsettled her almost as much as it comforted her.

"Um," Arabella managed, oh so intelligently. Heat crept faintly up her neck as one hand fluttered instinctively toward the leather satchel hanging against her hip. The bag suddenly felt impossibly heavy beneath her palm, weighed down not just by books and journals but by every irrational decision that had carried her across the country to this town. Arabella exhaled slowly through her nose and stepped closer to the counter despite herself, boots creaking softly against old wood..

"It’s a little hard to explain," she admitted at last, shoulders drooping faintly beneath the exhaustion she had been holding together with caffeine and stubbornness for the better part of a month. Her gaze dipped briefly toward the steam curling from the woman’s teacup before lifting again. "I’m not even entirely sure where to begin, honestly. It’s sort of a mess." Her mouth twitched weakly as she attempted something resembling humor.

"Would you prefer to hear first about the missing mother, the deeply concerning books left behind by my great-great-whatever grandmother, or the cryptic note said missing mother apparently thought was an acceptable replacement for actual communication?" The joke landed with all the grace of a brick tossed through stained glass. Arabella grimaced almost immediately afterward, the expression tightening across her face before she glanced away toward the shelves behind the counter. Embarrassment prickled hot beneath her skin.

"Sorry," she muttered automatically, fingers tightening harder against the satchel strap. "That sounded less insane in my head during the drive here."

The elder witch listened with a patience that never felt heavy or rushed. Her piercing gaze drifted along the girl as she spoke, taking in her stature, the anxious wringing of her hands along the strap of her satchel, or most notably her hair, bright like copper in the soft glow of the lanterns that hung overhead. Sable’s head cocked to the side slowly like she was studying a specimen and weighing the components before making a hypothesis. Magic had an aura, a scent like ozone in the air before lightning strikes or the metallic taste of iron that preceded blood along the tongue. She could sense it on all of her witches. It was lighter, softer here, like the fragrance of a candle lingering after the flame had long since been snuffed. But she could still feel it.

And that red hair.

Nine women received the gift on that fateful day one hundred and seventy-eight years ago. Nine families carried the gift through their bloodline, passing it on from one daughter to the next. And only one of those families had hair like leaves at the peak of autumn, warm, vibrant, and unmistakably them.

"You are a Crowe." The words fell from Sable’s burgundy painted lips, landing somewhere between a rhetorical question and a confident fact. Her expression softened as a heaviness settled behind her eyes and in the subtle furrowing of her brow. "I think this might be a conversation best had over tea."

Sable’s boots tapped softly against the creaking floorboards as she stepped around the young woman. She threw the deadbolt on the door and flipped the ‘open’ sign to ‘closed,’ then turned back toward her guest with a smile that widened with the unspoken understanding of a teacher who had shared similar conversations countless times before. "Come," she instructed gently with a nod of her head toward the deeper parts of her store.

The woman did not wait to see if the anxious girl seeking answers followed or not. It was her decision and the door was right there. But Sable knew, like she always did, that she’d follow eventually. If not now, then in five minutes, or ten, or she’d return in a day… Time was irrelevant. It was the questions seeking answers that only she could give.

Sable crossed the store with the same unrushed grace she had approached with, sharp clicks of her heels, muffled swish of fabric, and the soft clack of crystals dangling at her hip. She descended the small set of stairs with a hand on the railing, rounded the counter, making sure to give Cinder a passing, affectionate pet, then disappeared beyond the same beaded curtain that had yet to settle from her emergence. Beyond it was a small breakroom, of sorts. There was a half-sized fridge, a narrow counter with a single burner, and a tiny hanging cabinet above it. A slender window framed in maroon velvet and sheer black curtains looked out toward the alley behind the store. And tucked against the wall was a small round table with just enough room for two.

She set her cup down in front of one seat, then turned toward the kitchenette with purpose. First, Sable opened the cabinet to pull out another porcelain cup. Unlike hers which was white with black filigree and gold leafing around the brim, this one was ivory adorned in rich orchids and green vinery. She set it before the other available chair, then grabbed the kettle that was still warm and began filling it. There was already a small wooden box of teabags resting on the table, leaning against the wall, along with a sugar bowl, but she grabbed the honeypot as well before sitting down. Her back remained straight as a pin, never resting against the chair, as she crossed her right leg over her left and finally let herself enjoy a sip of her tea, which had dropped to a manageable temperature.

Arabella paused the moment the woman spoke her last name. The expression that crossed her face tightened faintly at the corners like she had bitten into something unexpectedly sour, uncertainty flickering quick and sharp behind her eyes. She had spent the better part of a month feeling as though she were steadily losing her grip on reality, and hearing a stranger identify her family line on sight did very little to improve the sensation. Still, she didn't argue. Curiosity rooted itself more stubbornly than fear ever could, and despite the cool ribbon of apprehension that slid down her spine when the deadbolt clicked into place behind her, Arabella found herself following after her anyway. The shop seemed quieter deeper inside it, the sounds of Main Street dissolving entirely beneath the creak of old floorboards and the soft chiming collision of crystals hanging from the woman’s belt.

The back room felt strangely intimate compared to the sprawling occult warmth of the storefront. Steam curled lazily from the kettle while soft gray daylight filtered through sheer black curtains across the narrow window, turning the room silver around the edges. Arabella hesitated briefly beside the small round table before lowering herself carefully into the offered chair, satchel perched protectively in her lap. Her attention drifted toward the porcelain cup set before her and then toward the open wooden tea box leaning against the wall. The labels were elegant, handwritten in careful script across cream-colored paper tags. After a brief pause, she selected one labeled Lemon Balm & Valerian Root.

"Do you make the tea blends yourself?" she asked quietly, curiosity threading naturally into her voice despite the knot of anxiety still tightening her chest. The sheer sachet looked handmade, delicate herbs visible through the thin mesh as she lowered it carefully into the steaming water. She added honey rather than sugar afterward, generous enough that golden ribbons sank slowly through the tea before disappearing beneath the surface. Even exhausted, Arabella carried herself with the sort of unconscious polish years in academic circles tended to cultivate. She stirred the tea carefully side to side without allowing the spoon to tap once against the porcelain, posture straight despite the weariness softening faintly through her shoulders. Somewhere between the warm scent of herbs and the muted amber light, she became abruptly aware that the woman across from her was very beautiful, though the realization arrived accompanied by immediate embarrassment she carefully shoved aside.

Sable lifted her hand from the side of her cup, waving it with an easy nonchalance along with a single shrug of her slender shoulders. "It is a quiet and boring town. I don’t often get customers, and I can only reread the same books so many times," she mused with a warm chuckle, dragging the tip of her index finger along the gold foiled brim of porcelain. "It’s good to have hobbies."

Arabella looked faintly surprised by the easy honesty of the admission. Something in her softened despite herself, tension easing subtly from her shoulders as her gaze drifted back toward the neat little box of tea blends resting beside the honey pot.

"It’s a nice hobby to have," she murmured, fingertips brushing lightly against one of the paper tags. "My grandmother used to do the same thing." A small smile touched briefly at the corner of her mouth before fading into something quieter, more distant. "My mom too, actually. I..." Her eyes lowered toward the steam curling from her tea. "I never really got into a lot of the things they wanted me to." And there was something in that admission, something that was followed by the hollow, guilt-addled sense of quiet but haunting grief.

"You are still young," Sable countered before the heaviness she saw in the girl’s eyes turned to something dark within the recesses of her mind, something that told her she was cruel for following whatever path she chose. "And even if you weren’t, nothing is stopping you from taking interest in something new." Her thumb lightly tapped against the handle of her cup, before lifting it to her lips to take another sip. Now, if she meant some as trivial as tea making, who’s to say. The advice could be applied in more ways than one.

Without another word, Arabella finally loosened her grip on the satchel and reached inside. First came the journal, old leather worn soft with age as she placed it carefully in the space between them. Then the larger book followed, heavier and stranger, its spine cracked from decades of use.

"It’s not in English," she warned, lips pursing slightly as her fingers lingered against the cover. "Mostly Latin, but there’s enough Sardinian and French scattered through it to feel intentionally hostile. I haven’t translated much yet, but… enough." Her voice faltered briefly there while her gaze dipped toward the open pages. Enough to find Pine Ridge written repeatedly through the margins. Enough to begin understanding that Lenora Crowe had believed in things Arabella had spent her entire adult life dismissing as folklore and ritual psychology. Heat rose faintly into her face a second later as another realization struck her all at once.

"God, sorry—I never actually introduced myself," she said quickly, looking up again with clear embarrassment painted across her cheeks. "You’re right, I’m a Crowe, Arabella. How did you..." she cleared her throat, and suddenly her tea cup seemed very interesting as she curled her hands around it, feeling the warmth settle into her fingers, eyes set on the teabag.

The elder witch slid her cup aside, polished ceramic dragging across the tapestry table cloth, to make room for the books. Her eyes settled on the journal first, leatherbound and nothing particularly unusual at a glance, but the moment the second text came into view, the first became immaterial. Sable should have known, should have felt it before she saw it. But the way the cracked leather and heavy tomb settled onto the table, like it had been brought home after over a century of distance, it nearly drew the breath from her lungs.

Old parchment, worn from weathered hands pouring over the pages, crinkled with age as the young woman opened the book before her. Sable’s eyes narrowed, dragging across the text as a dormant nostalgia churned to life beneath her ribs, warm and unbidden at the sight of a familiar script she had long since forgotten. There was a desire—no, a pull—to reach out and touch it, to run her fingertips along the pages etched with the scrawlings of a friend long past. But, she did not. It was not her place, nor did she have permission, and respect was everything within the Circle.

Her gaze lifted, finding blue eyes staring back at her, framed in the flush of her cheeks and the rich copper of her hair. For a brief moment, she saw Lenora sitting across from her, as bright and curious as the day they met. Then she blinked and time and reality settled heavily back upon her shoulders. While age had taken its toll on Sable’s soul, it did not show across her face as young features softened into a warm smile of patient understanding and knowing. The sleeve of her jacket nearly brushed across the pages as she extended her right hand across the table. "I am Sable Pritchard."

She then nodded her head toward Arabella’s hair, one side of her smile curling the faintest bit brighter. "Not many wander into my shop. Most assume it’s Satanic—devil worship," she clarified with a soft, amused chuckle. "It takes a certain breed to stumble their way through my door, and your hair—Crowe red—is not easily mistaken." Sable rocked her head back and forth in a small, pensive motion before curling two fingers through the handle of her cup. She lifted it slowly until the brim rested against her bottom lip. Hazel eyes studied the woman across from her for just a moment, then fell to the sloshing amber liquid beneath her nose. "You also smell like magic," she added casually, not looking up before taking a long sip.

Arabella’s lips pursed faintly at the mention of Satanic panic and devil worship, the expression carrying the tired familiarity of someone who had spent most of her adult life buried in old folklore and obscure theology departments. The impulse to dismiss it rose immediately to the tip of her tongue. She wanted to explain that she did not believe in any of this sort of thing either, not really. Not crystals humming with energy or chakra alignment or sage cleansing bad spirits from apartments in Brooklyn. Her relationship with old texts had always been academic, historical, and practical. Devils and Gods belonged to stories people told themselves when science failed to provide prettier answers.

Then Sable casually informed her that she smelled like magic.

Arabella’s mouth shut with a soft, audible click.

She blinked twice across the table, suddenly looking faintly unmoored in a way that sat strangely against the otherwise composed sharpness of her posture. Heat crept slowly into her face while her brain struggled uselessly to decide whether this conversation had crossed into charming eccentricity or full-blown insanity. Such a shame, honestly. The woman was distractingly pretty. "Right," Arabella said after a beat too long, her voice pitching slightly higher than it had been a moment earlier. "Well, that’s—um. That’s nice."

Her fingers twitched lightly against the warmth of her teacup while tension gathered visibly through her shoulders. For a fleeting second she looked on the verge of scooping the books back into her satchel and fleeing the shop entirely. The feeling passed almost as quickly as it came. Curiosity settled heavier than fear ever managed to, steady and relentless beneath her ribs. Arabella glanced briefly toward the journal resting between them before lifting her eyes back toward Sable again, cautious and intensely focused all at once.

"What, uh..." She paused, lips pressing together faintly as though reconsidering the wisdom of the question already halfway formed in her mouth. "What does that smell like?" The question slipped out quieter than the others had. Earnest despite her obvious skepticism. Arabella wrapped both hands around the porcelain cup afterward, grounding herself in the warmth seeping against her palms while steam curled softly between them.

Sable couldn’t help the small chuckle that hummed from behind her lips that were still pressed softly to the porcelain. It was a surprisingly tame response, all things considered. She expected a reaction. A latent witch raised far from Pine Ridge who shows up at her doorstep with a grimoire and no knowledge of what it is was obviously out of her depth, or at least kept in the dark. But the confused calmness was still entertaining nonetheless.

Lenora Crowe did not disappear from Pine Ridge with an artifact, never to be seen again, with the intention of carrying on the knowledge of their gift to her daughters. That much was obvious. Arabella wouldn’t have been sitting across from her asking questions she should have known the answers to. She should have been fluent in Latin, studying those inscriptions since she could read, yet she was none the wiser. It seemed Lenora had no intentions on sharing their craft. Sable just didn’t know how she felt about her old friend keeping their truth secret… keeping her secret. There was a subtle sting that came with that knowledge, one that slipped between her ribs like silk and cut deep, even if it did not show across her face.

Then the witch’s brows lifted, blindsided by the question. Based on Arabella’s reaction, her assumption was that the girl would swiftly move the conversation to other more comfortable topics… Or grab her things and run for the door. But instead she asked, her curiosity outwinning any apprehension. Sable nodded her head in quiet acknowledgement, setting down her cup and running her hands along the table, smoothing out the old tapestry cloth. "Distinctly metallic, like ozone in the air before lightning strikes or the after taste of iron down the back of your throat following a nose bleed," she offered up the answer plainly, without any fanfare or skirting around the truth. "Though every witch has her own—" She rubbed her fingers together like she was searching her mind or palate for the correct descriptor. "—zest."

Her hands settled, resting against the table, one on top of the other as she continued. "One of my girls smells like eucalyptus, something soft and welcoming, with a peaceful sort of calm." Sable’s head lulled minutely to the side, her brows raising with a mother’s sort of knowing and exhaustion. "The other smells like patchouli. Sometimes it’s sweet and sometimes it’s more musky, but it’s powerful, overwhelming… I almost can’t smell the neutral aura of magic beneath it." Then her eyes narrowed as she leaned a fraction closer and drew in a deep breath. "You—" She inhaled once more, nostrils flaring as she pulled in the woman’s scent and catalogued it. "—smell like cedar. It's an earthy sort of warmth, soothing with a tinge of something unexpected like embers of a dying fire."

Sable leaned back into her chair fully, letting her back rest against the support with a small shrug that almost feigned innocence. "However I cannot tell you my scent, only another witch can." She held up a single finger, interjecting gently with her own thought. "Though my ancestors’ texts say that there is a scent profile that carries through bloodlines, distinctly different between each member, but there is a symbiosis between them all." Her hand then rose, motioning toward Arabella. "Like your scent, cedar, for example. I’d say it’s a fair assumption that other women in your family had scents like sandalwood, vetiver, or oakmoss… If I had to make an educated guess."

Arabella listened in complete silence, though her mind moved fast enough beneath the surface to leave her faintly dizzy with it. Part of her wanted desperately to reach for the notepad tucked inside her satchel and begin documenting every word before memory could distort it later. Scent association through bloodlines. Latent magical markers. Inherited sensory patterns. The academic in her practically vibrated at the edges of the conversation despite the increasingly surreal subject matter. She resisted the urge only because she suspected pulling out a pen mid-conversation to take field notes on witchcraft might finally tip her fully into humiliation. Instead she sat very still with one hand wrapped around her teacup while the nails of her opposite hand tapped lightly against the porcelain in uneven little rhythms whenever her thoughts snagged somewhere important.

There were too many things suddenly fitting together in ways she did not appreciate.

Her mother had always smelled faintly of sandalwood regardless of what perfume she wore. Arabella remembered burying her face into the collar of Eleanor’s sweaters as a child and breathing it in without ever questioning why the scent lingered so consistently. Her grandmother’s house had carried thick traces of oakmoss in every room, earthy enough that it used to make Arabella sneeze during holiday visits. And beneath those memories sat another older one she had not thought about in years; standing beside her great-grandmother’s bedside while the woman lay dying, the room filled with the cool green scent of vetiver so strongly it almost coated the inside of her mouth. At the time she had assumed it came from candles or oils or old furniture polish. Now the memory sat beneath her ribs with an entirely different sort of weight. Arabella drew in a slow sharp breath and pressed her lips tightly together while staring into the amber surface of her tea.

The silence stretched long enough to feel tangible. She could not quite bring herself to look directly at Sable again, mostly because the mortifying reality of trying to identify another person’s scent across a table felt deeply insane even by the rapidly deteriorating standards of this conversation. Still, once the thought lodged itself into her mind, she found herself noticing it anyway. The woman smelled distinct. Expensive, perhaps, but softer than traditional perfume. Floral notes lingered beneath something darker and resinous that reminded her faintly of old churches and antique libraries warmed by candlelight. Arabella chewed lightly against the inside of her cheek before finally glancing up again, brows furrowing faintly as she sorted carefully through the impressions.

"Amber… black orchid, maybe. Scarlet poppies?" she murmured slowly, fingertips tapping once against the side of her cup. "Carnation too, I think." The moment the words left her mouth, embarrassment crashed into her almost immediately afterward.

"This is…" Arabella paused, visibly searching for the least offensive phrasing while one hand rose to push loose copper strands nervously behind her ear. "Unique," she settled on finally, though the word carried clear strain around the edges. Her posture remained tense despite her efforts to appear composed, shoulders held too straight while uncertainty tightened quietly through her expression.

"You are just wearing a perfume though… right?" she asked carefully, though conviction wavered badly beneath the question. "Magic isn’t…" The sentence faltered halfway through. Arabella frowned faintly at her own reflection trembling in the surface of the cup. "I’m sorry, but magic isn’t real." The words landed softer than she intended. Less like certainty, more like something she was trying very hard to keep believing.

For a moment, Sable found herself intrigued, eyes narrowing and head tilting to the side as she ran her tongue along the back of her teeth. The other scents she had never heard and could very well be a result of her perfume, soaps, lotions, or plethora of other things that touch her skin throughout the day. But black orchid. She could remember it as if it was yesterday… Sybil in her ivory dressing gown so large that the ruffled hem dragged along the floorboards. Her wild black curls tamed into two braids fastened with uneven ribbon bows. She wasn’t yet five and was doing as young children often did, finding any and every reason to avoid going to bed. A few more moments, that is all.

She came stumbling up the hall, tripping over her nightgown and her own little feet that she hadn’t grown into yet. A single chubby finger was looped through the handle of a brass candlestick holder, the other clutching a flower so tight that the stem flattened in her grasp. She hurried up to Sable’s—Sabine’s—bedside, practically shoving the plant up into her face. "Look, momma," she squealed with excitement. "It smells like you." A single orchid, darker than night with a faint touch of burgundy along its petals, stared back up at her… A black orchid.

The memory then faded away like a vision in smoke as if Arabella’s words cut through the illusion and brought her back to the emptiness of the present. Sable’s curious smile faded beneath the unseen weight of grief and the girl’s own reluctance to accept her words for fact. But, not all can be convinced so easily and it was becoming blatantly obvious that Lenora had failed to educate her daughters and her daughter’s daughters. It was sad to see the absence of knowledge as a choice rather than the weathering of time. In the end, no one could help her see beyond the lies until she chose to open her eyes and see for herself.

"Ah, right," she mused with a soft laugh that was tired, like a woman who had heard the same sentiments whispered by others who wandered into her shop. "Magic and witches are just folklore… tales to scare children at night or tools to make the undeserving, like J. K. Rowling, wealthy." Sable lifted two fingers from where they rested on top of her other hand, motioning them twice without giving it much thought, almost like a tick rather than something given proper thought. Then somewhere beneath her coat, two small crystals that hung from her belt—one clear quartz and the other labradorite—shimmered faintly in the darkness.

"I am afraid then that your inquiries might be better answered at the local library, or the Sheriff’s Station." Her right hand shifted from where it was lying, lifting just in time to catch a paper business card and an ornate silver fountain pen as it floated through the air and drifted straight into her grasp. She set the card face down with no flourish or unnecessary pomp, and began to write directions with a steady hand in an elegant, curling cursive. "If you take a left out of my shop, the library will be the large building at the center of town on the right, with a clock on top." She gestured along as she spoke, before putting pen to paper once again and continuing. "And the road ends in the Sheriff’s Station. You can’t miss it."

With that, Sable scooped up the business card and held it out to Arabella with a faint smile that, if for but a moment, showed the weariness of her age behind her eyes. "I do hope you find all the answers you seek."

Arabella felt herself stiffen almost immediately at the woman's words, heat rising up the back of her neck and blooming across her cheeks in a quiet wave. Something defensive lifted its head inside her chest before she even had time to understand why. She sat a little straighter in her chair, fingers tightening around the warm porcelain of her cup as she prepared herself to argue—to explain that she wasn't dismissive, that she wasn't ignorant, that skepticism and judgment were not interchangeable things. Whatever speech had begun assembling itself in her mind died a sudden and graceless death.

Because the pen floated through the air.

Her mouth dropped open slightly as her eyes tracked the silver fountain pen and business card drifting cleanly across the room before settling neatly into Sable's waiting hand. Arabella stared at them without blinking. The expression crossing her face held no simple shock to it. Her thoughts moved too quickly for that. Heat lived behind her eyes now, a frantic sort of focus, the expression of someone staring at a puzzle already halfway solved but with no understanding of how the pieces had been placed together in the first place. Her face puckered faintly, lips twisting as though she'd bitten into something unexpectedly sour before smoothing out again. "I most certainly wouldn't connect the possible existence of actual magic with the likes of someone like J.K. Rowling," she huffed, sounding weirdly offended by it despite herself. "I was raised being told by my family with clear emphasis that magic was never, and never would be real. So excuse me for being a little skeptical."

Sable had expected the anger, but that did not help it settle any softer in her chest. She did not blame Arabella for her lack of knowledge or the offense that flashed sharp behind her eyes, she blamed Lenora and her descendants. Magic was a gift, yes, but also a responsibility. One by one the other lines dwindled or vanished, and as the Circle grew smaller the weight grew heavier upon Sable’s shoulders. It was not fair to her, or to her girls. It used to be nine lineages strong and now it was three, four if she counted the reluctant woman across from her… And knowing that knowledge was withheld sat almost as uneasily as the truth did for Arabella.

"You were raised to believe a lie," Sable corrected gently like a mother would to an upset child. Her words were soft and gentle, like an olive branch of understanding.

The words landed harder than they should have. Arabella felt the impact of them low in her chest, sudden and strange, like stepping down a staircase and finding one step missing. Her shoulders tightened instinctively and she flinched before she could stop herself, the movement small enough that most people might have missed it if they had not been looking closely. She said nothing, because for one horrible, fleeting moment, some small frightened part of her had wondered what if the woman was right.

The irritation faded almost as quickly as it came. Something heavier settled in its place. Arabella looked down toward the card resting between them and suddenly felt very, very tired. She had come here for help. Not answers necessarily, not certainty, not miracles, but help. Some quiet selfish part of her had walked into this strange little shop and sat across from this woman believing that perhaps, finally, someone would look at the mess in her hands and tell her she wasn't chasing shadows. Instead she felt gently pushed back toward the door, toward libraries and police stations and practical things she'd already exhausted herself on months ago. The feeling slipped beneath her ribs with surprising ease. A lost cause. The thought sat there before she could stop it. Not dramatic. Just quiet. Familiar.

Arabella swallowed hard and set her cup down carefully onto the tablecloth before reaching forward to gather the books against her chest. The leather covers felt heavier now than they had minutes ago. "Right," she said softly, the stiffness in her voice working harder than she was. "Sorry for bothering you." She never reached for the card with directions. She had memorized the town map before arriving, memorized roads and names and landmarks because she had needed to feel prepared for something. Anything. Rising too quickly from her chair, she held the books tightly against herself instead of placing them back inside the satchel. Moisture burned sharply at the corners of her eyes and she took a slow breath through her nose, blinking hard once before the feeling could spill over. All she wanted was her mom back. "Thank you for the tea."

Sable did not rise from her seat, nor did she try to stop her. Heavy revelations took time to process. She understood that and wasn’t going to demand recognition. Her head nodded just once toward the books clutched tight against the girl’s chest. "It is a grimoire, a book of witchcraft." Long slender fingers laced together and rested against the edge of the table with a patience learned from over two centuries of life. "I understand, and I can sympathize with your anger. I do not fault you for directing it at me." A heavy sigh fell from her burgundy tinted lips as her gaze fell to the porcelain before her and the tea that had run cold.

She did not stand up, did not attempt to stop the young woman or convince her to stay. The crystals that dangled from thin silver chains at her hip vibrated to life once more, glowing faintly beneath the hem of her coat. On the opposite side of the shop the deadbolt unlocked and the sign that hung from the door flipped to ‘open.’ "When you’re ready… My door is always open." Sable didn’t look up, and even with her face half hidden behind loose black curls, she still looked weary with the sort of exhaustion that came from lifetimes of knowledge and loneliness. It was odd, the way it clung to her features, misplaced for someone who was apparently so young. But beneath it, a sad smile persisted, patient and calm in its understanding. Then without another word, her finger curled around the handle of her cup, and she lifted it to her lips, drinking the tepid remains of her tea… because unlike Lenora Crowe, she was not wasteful.


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Hidden 22 days ago Post by Mjolnir
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#89684d ....|..... outfit .....|..... weston ranch > main street


Mornings on the ranch started when the faint glow of the sun kissed the sky beneath the horizon. Amber bled into indigo, and the shadows darkened and stretched before daylight scared them away. The dawn had always been Clint’s favorite time of day. The world had yet to stir awake, existing in a delicate, serene balance, undisturbed by the dregs of society that prowled the night like nocturnal predators. Sunrises were for nature and wildlife. It was for the world as he used to know it, free to exist in a vacuum before modernity suffocated and snuffed it out. He had a deeper, richer appreciation for the sun after spending decades in its absence, surviving on only candlelight and incandescent bulbs like cheap imitations. If the sun was up, then so was Clint, because possibilities were born in the light of day… and Clint liked the man he was by day, rather than the monster he was at night.

Clint had been out tending to his cattle long before the Townsend boys crept onto his property, yawning with large thermoses already half drained of coffee by the time they pushed through the old wooden gate. The frost and dew that clung stubbornly to the long blades of grass crunched underfoot as the men set to filling one of the readied wagons with bales of hay and large pumpkins that had been growing all season just for this occasion. They moved in a synchronous rhythm learned from years of working together, little words shared beyond quiet confirmations and the steady grunts of manual labor.

The first wagon filled quickly, topped off with feed for the animals, three troughs, and a handful of brushes. The second took far more patience and time. Half a dozen wooden cages lined the bottom of the wagon, lids opened and ready for whatever creature was going to be placed inside. They took their time, making sure not to frighten any of the animals, and calm the skittish ones, before placing them gently into their own cage with enough straw to cushion the journey and a few treats, like carrots, to sweeten the deal. When they finished there were two pygmy goats, three young pigs, and half a dozen adolescent hares tucked away safely.

While Coop worked on strapping the ranch’s strongest stallion, Maverick, up to the wagon weighed down with hay and pumpkins, Tucker went and grabbed Tulip, the calmest mare in the stables, so she could pull the cart full of small, caged creatures. Clint, on the other hand, took it upon himself to take the rope tethers and gather up the last remaining animals. First was Sunflower, a pony already saddled and ready to give kids a ride around the pen. Followed by Walter the alpaca, and Dandy the sheep.

When he returned to the small assembled herd, Coop and Tucker sat on top of the fence, passing a cigarette back and forth while taking a small break. "Y’know that’ll kill ya," Clint goaded them, sparing the young men an incredulous look from beneath the brim of his hat as he looped the animals’ tethers loosely around Tulip’s breeching.

The brothers both laughed, smoke billowing from their mouths in white ribbons. "It’s a vape," Coop countered, holding up the small plastic contraption like it made a lick of sense to him.

Clint sighed, pushing off his knees as he stood upright. "I don’t reckon it makes much of a difference."

Tucker took one more hit that smelled faintly of strawberries before sliding the device into his jacket pocket and hopping down from the fence. "But you’re like a cowboy or whatever… Shouldn’t you dip or chew or whatever the hell you old people call it?"

A laugh, deep and unbidden, roared to life in Clint’s chest. The irony of ‘old’ hitting a little harder than either of the young men intended. "I used to—centuries ago—when I was young blooded, such as yourselves," he mused, playing into their jokes about age with a surprising truth that they’d be none the wiser to. "But then I realized I like my teeth more than the fleetin’ rush from tobacco." His smile widened, bright, white, and undeniably charming. Sure, over a century of chewing never made a dent on his smile, but he read about the newer discoveries, and what have you, and while they didn’t affect him personally, there was nothing wrong with advocating for healthier life choices. Plus, the blood of a nonsmoker tasted significantly better.

Clint dipped his hand into the back pocket of his jeans and pulled out a pack of spearmint gum. He flipped open the paper box and pulled out a single piece of gum, then tucked the pack back into his pocket for safe keeping. Calloused fingers patiently started peeling back the silver foil, revealing the thin green rectangle covered in glistening sugar crystals. "I also discovered that ladies prefer a man that smells—and tastes—like mint over tobacco." His grin widened knowingly as he popped the piece of gum into his mouth and started chewing.

The brothers spared each other a quick sidelong glance before they both doubled over in laughter, gripping their sides and slapping their knees as their roars carried across the field and stirred a flock of birds. "Ladies? What ladies?" Coop wheezed out between laughs, hardly able to catch his breath.

Clint shook his head and rolled his eyes as he made his way over to his horse that was tied to a fence post off to the side. He lifted up his hat for a second to slick back his hair before setting it securely back on top of his head. As he approached the loyal mare, he gave her an affectionate stroke to the mane along with a gentle whisper. "Atta girl, Obbie." Then curled up in the grass not far from the horse, a blue speckled cattle dog stirred awake with a big yawn. Clint crouched down and gave the boy some ear scratches that brought his tail to life, beating against the ground and stirring the early morning bugs with its lively wag.

As he stood back up, he glanced over his shoulder toward the farm hands as their laughter eased while they wiped tears from their eyes. "It’s called a private life for a reason, boys," Clint replied, used to the playful jabs and barbs hurled around between himself and the men that worked for him. He reached up, grabbing the horn of the saddle while he slipped his left foot into the stirrup. Then with the ease of a man who had been riding since he could walk, he hoisted himself up in a single fluid motion, swinging his other leg over the back of the horse, and setting into the seat. He gathered up the reins in his left hand as he gently guided Obbie over toward the wagons, his cattle dog, Spur, stretching dramatically and following after them.

When the horse came to a stop, he rested his hands lazily against the saddle horn, looking back and forth between the amused young men. "I also don’t recall seein’ either of you sportin’ a young lady on your arms while walkin’ through town."

Coop and Tucker’s laughter stopped abruptly as they shared a glance, and coughed around their own embarrassment. "That’s what I thought," Clint mused with a quiet chuckle of his own. "Alright. Coop I want you with Maverick at the front. Tucker you’ll be with Tulip. Take the others with ya." He nodded his head toward the pony, alpaca, and sheep that waited patiently beside the horse in question. "Spur ‘n I will be at the back, or directin’ traffic if needed."

The young men laughed once again as they drifted toward their assigned positions. "Directing traffic," Tucker mused as he gathered up the rope tethers.

"Yeah, well," Clint conceded with a sigh and a shrug of one shoulder. "The Mayor paid for all that fancy advertisin’, so who knows how busy this place’ll get." He ran his hands along the leather of the reins, finding his grip as he adjusted himself in the saddle. "We’ll take it nice ‘n slow. Walk right into town ‘n down Main Street. There’s no rush, so let the animals set the pace."

Their journey toward the center of town was slow, having to stop more than once to get Walter’s lazy ass in gear. And while Pine Ridge had started stirring to life as the sun crested over the tops of trees, their trek was rather uneventful with citizens giving them a wide berth and a wave, or going a different route entirely. It seemed as though there wasn’t much of a need to take tourists into consideration, until it very much became their problem in the worst way possible.

They weren’t far from Main Street, no more than a block, when a minivan—far newer and more expensive than most of the metal contraptions that plagued the streets—came barrelling down the street, faster than any of the posted speed signs, careless, and obviously in a hurry. Their brakes squealed as they waited far too long to slow down, stopping close enough to Obbie’s heels that she huffed, shook her head, and cantered forward a couple steps. Clint glared back at the driver over his shoulder while stroking his horse’s mane to try and keep her calm, but he didn’t hurry or move his procession aside. They weren’t far now, and like everyone else, they could either wait or go around. It wasn’t like the festival was starting in five minutes anyway.

It lasted for no more than thirty seconds before a loud horn sliced through the cold mountain air, piercing and alarming against the quiet backdrop of their peaceful town. Obbie reared, startled and frightened, hooves carving sharp arcs. Clint reacted on instinct before he could think, leaning forward to counter balance the shift in his mount, thighs gripping firmly to her chest while his hold on her reins tightened. Underfoot, Spur yelped and dashed onto the sidewalk, narrowly missing one of the hooves as it came back down to the ground. Meanwhile Coop struggled with Maverick’s leads, trying to calm the large stallion before he tore through the town with the wagon in tow, and Tucker held tight to the rope leads, doing his best to keep Sunflower, Walter, and Dandy from running off in all different directions.

Leather groaned beneath Clint’s grip as he did his best to calm himself, closing his eyes for a moment, feeling the dull ache of his fangs against his lower lip. The tip of his tongue ran along the edge of his teeth, in an attempt to steel his temper with measured breaths. But that only lasted long enough for his fangs to retract, then he moved. Leaving his men to handle his rattled livestock, Clint dismounted in one smooth, fluid motion. He tethered Obbie’s reins to a nearby street sign, then turned and headed toward the vehicle.

"Boss," one of the Townsend boys called after him, but he paid them no mind.

His spurs clicked against the asphalt in a slow, rhythmic beat as he approached the idling minivan. He tapped two knuckles against the driver’s side window. His face was a picture of easy, sun-baked charm, a polite smile pulling at the corners of his mouth beneath the shadow of his Stetson. When the window rolled down, Clint rested his left forearm on the roof of the car while his right hand flicked his hat back just enough for the golden glow of morning sun to catch in his eyes. "Mornin’ folks," he greeted them with a grin and the quiet pop of chewing gum.

The driver, a balding middle aged man, red in the face with a ring of sweat around the collar of his shirt, looked Clint up and down with visible distaste. "Aren’t you a little old for Halloween?" he practically snarled.

Clint laughed, perhaps a little forced, but it looked genuine enough in the way his head tilted back slightly and his hand lightly slapped the side of the car. "Now if I had a nickel for every time I heard that." He let out an amused little whistle as his right thumb hooked on his belt beside his holster, a motion that was subconscious, born of comfort and repetition. But not so much to the tourists. The husband shared a panicked sidelong glance with his wife, knuckles turning white along the steering wheel as his gaze snapped back to the revolver then up to the cowboy. Clint’s attention followed, punctuated with a quiet click of his tongue. "Don’t you worry yourselves about that, friends. It’s for the wolves. Big ole pack runs through the Black Hills," he added, waving his finger toward the woods around them. "Never can be too safe." He patted the side of his holster once for emphasis before making an effort to rest his hand a decent ways from it.

He leaned over a bit, getting a better look at the man’s equally frazzled wife, along with their pair of ankle bitters sitting in the backseat, who looked far more entertained at the concept of a living and breathing cowboy standing just outside the car. "Y’all in town for the festival?" Clint asked, his drawl thick and smooth as molasses.

"Yeah, yes," the driver responded quickly with a curt nod, his stress evident in the tensing of his shoulders and the contorting of his face. "Just got in. Drove through the night. Would really like to—"

"Say," Clint interrupted, not giving a shit about whatever the man’s excuses were, instead lowering his head and looking past him to get a better view of his kids. "’Bet you kids like pettin’ zoos."

The children practically bounced in their seats with palpable excitement while their mother spared them an affectionate, albeit incredulous glance. "It’s all they’ve been talking about."

"I figured. Most kids do." Clint’s smile widened, but it never quite reached his eyes as he looked back at the driver. "’Well, you kids can thank your pa for not being allowed near my pettin’ zoo tonight… Seein’ how he spooked my animals ‘n nearly got my dog killed."

The little girl’s lip began to quiver, and within a matter of seconds, the car devolved into a cacophony of loud wails and flailing limbs. The mom unbuckled her seat belt, quickly turning around to try and sooth her kids as best she could. "Oh, sweetie. No, it’s ok—Shh. It’s ok." The woman’s gaze then snapped to Clint, brows furrowed as her face reddened to nearly the same shade as her husband's. "Look what you did. Was that really necessary?"

"Apologies, ma’am. But your husband scared my livestock. I simply returned the favor in kind."

"Gary!" the woman squealed nearly as loud as her own children, not knowing if her anger should be directed at Clint, her husband, or perhaps both.

The driver thumped his forehead against the steering wheel twice, no doubt a man who had long suffered the naggings of his wife regarding his own lack of patience or piss poor attitude.

Clint’s hand slipped in through the open window and caught the man’s sweat slick forehead before he slammed it down a third time. He couldn’t help but grimace slightly at the moisture along his fingers as he pushed him back until his head bumped softly into the headrest. "Careful. We wouldn’t wanna make the same mistake twice, now would we?"

"Look, man—sir," the man started his groveling. Clint wasn’t entirely sure if it was on his behalf or more out of fear of his wife, but he couldn’t help but be moderately entertained as he watched the driver panic as he tried to make things right. "It was an accident. My hand slipped—"

"Your hand slipped?" Clint echoed, his brows lifting in quiet disbelief.

"I wasn’t thinking. I’m tired—We were just trying to get to the motel before it was all booked—I’m sorry. Is your dog ok?" The man continued to ramble, his eyes darting back and forth between his fuming wife beside him, the screaming kids in the backseat, and Clint still leaning against the side of the minivan waiting for the truth in the slew of his lies. "Look, I can make this right—" He leaned to the side, hand diving behind him as he fumbled for his wallet.

Before he was even able to flip the black leather open and dig for cash, Clint laughed, his expression twisting into a mix of amusement, bewilderment, and pure disbelief. "I don’t want your paper, friend," he commented between chuckles with a small shake of his head. "Those animals are my livelihood, ‘n that dog is my family. Your money don’t ease their jitters or buy back a broken leg."

The man sighed, sweat trickling down the side of his face while his wife beside him bounced back and forth between trying to calm the kids and whispering expletives in her husband’s ear. "Please," he practically begged, desperation and exhaustion plain across his face. "They’ve been looking forward to this all week. We drove all the way from Wichita."

"Then you should have practiced some patience," Clint replied as his sunny disposition dropped entirely, replaced with a grave seriousness and anger behind his eyes. "I don’t want you, nor your kin, anywhere near my pens tonight. ‘N if you scare my animals again, I’ll slash your fuckin’ tires. Do we understand each other?"

The driver gritted his teeth, kids growing louder and more despondent in the backseat, while his wife leaned back in her seat with her arms crossed furiously over her chest. No words were shared, just the faintest nod of acknowledgement.

Clint stood up straight, adjusting the brim of his hat with a crisp, polite flick of his wrist as his charming smile widened brightly and slipped right back into place, like it had never left. "Now y’all enjoy the festival," he offered warmly, giving the car door a friendly pat before taking a step back. "And welcome to Pine Ridge."

Before he reached Obbie, the minivan was thrown into reverse. And if Clint was a betting man, he imagined that sweaty driver had every intention to floor it until his wife nagged in his ear about not scaring the animals, because that car crawled backwards so slow, he wondered if it was moving at all.

He didn’t spare them another glance as he checked on Spur, making sure he was ok, then untied his horse from around the street sign. By the time he climbed back on top of Obbie and settled himself in the saddle, the minivan was nowhere to be seen. He reached up to adjust his hat, looking over Coop and Tucker who both stood nearby, a little confused, but mostly laughing. "What are y’all gawkin’ at?" The brothers shared a sidelong glance, snickered, then returned to their posts alongside each of the carts. "Let’s get these animals to the pen before I end up killin’ one of these damn tourists."



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Hidden 22 days ago 21 days ago Post by AuthorialTheory
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AuthorialTheory A Vortex of Theorem

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#ff4500 ....|..... outfit .....|..... pierre, south dakota > main street


The night was for the enterprising individual.

While the cold shine of day gently nudged bodies into motion with warmth and bright realities, the enshrouded ebony sky of darkness chased away the sunlight and brought about an age of quiet zealous. It was during these blackened hours that the difference between go-getting and hustling was made apparent. Only the minds of the most dutiful were active in the night. As the rest of the world slept, they alone drew on the energy of the risen moon to conduct their sordid business. That, or insomnia wrenched away their sleep and forced their awakened state to prolong. Either way, the sleeping night was the time to be alive. That’s what Dravian Forscythe thought as the motor on his Harley Davidson Dyna growled along, the black pitch chassis of the sleek machine chewing up the road in front of it at eighty miles an hour.

Dravian had forgone sleep ever since the Solomon Group. Back then, he was trained to rest when necessary and to hoard excessive amounts of energy in the moments when he physically appeared to be doing nothing. You can sleep when you’re dead was the famous phrase beaten into his head. After so many years of covert operations, the hue of ebon darkness became his active hour. He’d always gotten the most work done in the middle of the night and when he did sleep, it would only be because his body forced itself to shut down during the daylight. Nothing could topple him over at night. He’d thought moving to Pine Ridge for a new, quieter life would have changed that fact, but it hadn’t. When he bought the hardware store from old man Stan Danvers, he’d negotiated the terms over the phone at night, his mind restless and robbing the old man of his restoration. Sleep had always been a non-issue for Dravian and as he sped down the highway and passed the welcome sign for Pierre, South Dakota, he knew this night would be no different.

Dravian pulled off the highway at the third exit ramp and slowed down to a reasonable cruising speed within city limits. Even though Pierre was the capital of South Dakota, it was also the third least populous capital in the country with a measly fourteen thousand or so bodies roaming around at any given time. Of course, most of those bodies were in rest and for what Dravian needed to do, that was the ideal situation. He rode down empty roads sometimes marveling at the height of the buildings compared to Pine Ridge. He’d only been in the mountain town for six months, but he felt like he missed some of an inner city’s aesthetic with crunched in roads and forced parallel parking. He took a few turns where the roads became even narrower and he spotted a few idle pedestrians strolling or standing around minding their business. Considering it was near two in the morning though, the fleeting thought that they were up to no good crossed Dravian’s mind. He chuckled under his helmet. The irony.

The Dyna crawled to a stop across the street from a darkened museum, parallel parked in front of a closed tattoo shop. Unlike most places downtown, it had its own small parking lot near the entrance. Dravian flipped up his visor and surveyed the area. A scant few vehicles passed him by going both directions, but no one was on the sidewalks on either side. It made perfect sense. He pulled a backpack from his shoulders and around to his front, unzipping the biggest compartment and fetching a thrice folded piece of paper from within. He carefully unfolded and let his eyes absorb the information. It was a blueprint of the museum he’d paid good money for and, so far, the exterior matched what was in the print. He grinned under the helmet, crow’s feet around his eyes scrunching into one another. He carefully refolded the blueprints and stored them back in the backpack. Swung a leg around and off the bike and put the backpack where he once sat. He knew no one would be around to take it at this time of night and he no longer needed the blueprints considering he’d already spent a painstaking amount of time memorizing them.

A hand dipped into his back jeans pocket and produced a black slate. Dravian tapped the screen, then swiped and tapped a few more times before putting the slate to his ear. He removed the helmet and hung it on a handlebar on the bike as ringing filled his ear. ”Yeah… It’s just like you said. Looks like it opens in a few days. Yeah… Yeah. Don’t ask and don’t worry. Contact you when I’ve got your merchandise.” The phone slid back into his back pocket as Dravian took a breath. This was his opportunity. A brand new museum of art still a few days out from opening because work crews were installing the final component—security systems. With security a work-in-progress, all Dravian had to do was follow the plan he’d meticulously crafted. He flexed his hands as he crossed the empty street and made his way towards the museum.

As soon as he hit the sidewalk, Dravian turned left and walked seemingly away from the building. He kept his eyes on the large white square the entire time he strode. It really was a grand design. Huge, towering columns near the entrance, a massive white body that fanned out in the shape of a rectangle with a dome situated right in the center on top, and design flourishes scattered across the exterior of the building in a specific pattern. The place was going to be packed when it opened, Dravian thought. He rounded a corner and continued walking. More cars passed him by and he wordlessly slid by a few bystanders as he kept his pace. He was on a timetable, but not necessarily a time clock. He just wanted to be in and out already. That was the anxiety he had before any job. Finally, he stopped after he rounded another corner and met the entrance to an alleyway. He smiled and turned into it, walking straight into the mouth of darkness. Shadows caressed both brick walks beside him and played shapes from fire escapes attached to the brick. It was only another two minutes of brisk walking before Dravian made it to the back of the museum. A service door loomed in front of him just up a set of stairs and no one was posted by it. Something Dravian knew was bound to occur at this time of night. This wasn’t DC after all; who the hell cared about a new museum in South Dakota?

Clarks chukka-style boots patiently crept up the stairs to the service door where a keypad had been installed. Dravian chuckled and shook his head. Most people thought in this newer age that networking things was the safest option. That couldn’t have been further from the truth. Dravian retrieved his phone again and started tapping and swiping on the screen. He placed it near the keypad when he found what he was looking for and watched the display on the keypad scramble a bunch of characters before inputting the correct sequence. The service door popped ajar with a click. ”Thank you Mont,” he said quietly. Dravian pocketed the device once more and opened the door slowly. His mind briefly wished for a weapon, but these kinds of jobs didn’t require it. He had grown a distaste for firearms as the years went by anyway. They always complicated otherwise simple matters.

Dravian pulled the emergency bar behind him until the service door closed softly. He found himself in a tight corridor that led into a kitchen area. There were large sinks and cooktops, metal shelving with dishes and containers stored on them and what looked to be refrigerators and a large freezer door built into a wall. Halogen tubes emitted the faintest glow of light from the ceiling, obviously having been set to a lower temperature due to the time of night. Dravian stepped carefully on tiled flooring as he made his way through the kitchen and navigated around the various appliances and open islands. He had one objective and based on the schematics it wasn’t far from the kitchen and the service door entrance. He emerged into a cafe after he exited the kitchen. It was completely dark, the security bulbs overhead not registering his presence. A work-in-progress, Dravian thought.

He strode around circular tables and metal chairs and low couches. He went to open the glass door to exit and found it locked. Dravian sighed. Inconvenient, but easy enough to remedy. He dug into his front pocket and pulled out a small case. He opened the case to reveal a lockpick set and pulled one from its fastened loop. He crouched down and got to work on the rim lock. He inserted the tension wrench and then the pin beneath that. He played around a bit until he heard and felt an audible click. He quickly replaced the tools in the case and pocketed the case before pulling open the glass door. Once again, no alarms sounded and no monitors were set off. This was his opportunity. Dravian immediately turned left and quietly jogged up a set of flaring stairs to a second level. The second level consisted of bridges and skywalks that he guessed somehow would make the visitors feel like they were inside the pinnacle of modernity.

He jogged past statues and rooms off the beaten path that housed glasses full of what he assumed was tangible, physical art items like jewelry, and he even jogged past crew members working on security systems at different parts of the museum. After doing his research, he’d found that a security company had been hired to do the work, but they held dubious licenses and employed illegal immigrants to do the work since they could pay them under the table and not what they were worth. Because of that, they showed up in whatever casual outfits they were wearing and not a company standard uniform. Perfect for Dravian as he was dressed in basic, utilitarian clothing as well—a black t-shirt pressed over dark washed jeans and Clarks boots. For all intents and purposes, he blended right in. He finally stopped his jog when he reached the end of a skywalk and approached a room to his right. Two suited security guards were posted in the room, but had their backs to the entrance as they marveled over a certain painting. It was small, much smaller than the grand designs one was used to seeing in an art museum like the Louvre in Paris. It seemed like it could be rolled up and pocketed at its smaller size. It sat behind glass. Dravian stopped just inside the room.

”Can you believe this is a genuine Claude Monet?” One of the guards marveled. The other shrugged.

”A what?”

”A Claude Monet! Fuckin’ uncultured…”

”Listen, wha’ do I give a shit about art? I’m here ‘cause it’s easy money.”

”You know how much this is worth? Look at it! Don’t it draw you in at all?

The guard moved closer to the painting. ”Looks like a pretty landscape, but who gives a shit?”

The other guard sighed and went to turn around. Just as he held up his head to the entrance, he felt a strike to his throat causing it to constrict and choked and wheezed before another shot agonized his groin, doubling him over just as an elbow pierced the back of his head from above. He crumpled to the linoleum unconscious.

”The hell—“ was all the second guard managed as Dravian closed in on him. The heel of his palm lashed out at the guard’s nose bridge forcing him to stumble backwards and tightly shut his eyes. Dravian followed up by kicking out the guard’s inner knee forcing him down on the other knee before sending a straight front kick to his temple. He sprawled to the ground unconscious as well. Cold efficiency. That’s what the Solomon Group had taught all their operatives. Nothing needed to be flashy when it could all be efficient and quicker than a flash. The whole ordeal had only taken thirteen seconds. Dravian sighed and shook his head. Mont would have put him in the hole for that kind of lackluster performance. He turned his attention to the painting on the wall and regained a smile pulling at the corners of his mouth. Here was his target in pristine condition.

With no security system up and running, Dravian popped open the glass and retrieved the frame off the wall carefully. He placed it on a nearby glass display and got to work slowly removing the ornate golden frame. He only needed the picture itself, after all. It depicted a detailed impressionist painting of a bridge over a creek with grassy banks on either side. It was done very nicely, but Dravian truly didn’t know anything about art. He simply knew what it worth and what he needed to do to get to it. He carefully rolled it into a tight tube and slid it into his back pocket. Then made his way out of the room, back down the skywalks, down the stairs, through the cafe ensuring to re-lock the door on his way in, through the kitchen, and back out the service entrance.

As Dravian crossed the street and approached his Dyna, he went over it in his head. The whole encounter had taken about twelve minutes. Two minutes slower than his usual with this kind of job. He wondered if age played a role or if not having a handler and a boss to answer to had softened his edge. He wondered as he shouldered his backpack, placing the painting inside, and swung his leg over the bike and mounted it. He wondered as the beast roared to life and he turned and went back the way he came, heading to the nearest highway exit ramp and getting on going southbound. He wondered as he sped down the road again towards Pine Ridge. It would be a two hour drive so he had plenty of time to contemplate as he weaved through the limited number of vehicles on the road with him.

{}{}{}


Dravian silenced his phone alarm as it interrupted the silence of the hardware store. It was nine fifty-five am. He’d changed his outfit after returning, showering, and getting a limited amount of sleep for his troubles. He’d gotten back up around seven in the morning, showered again, eaten in his upstairs apartment, then came down to handle business. The new owner of the Claude Monet painting had only left thirty minutes prior. He had been a talker, gushing over the art and how profound it was and exactly what it was meant to interpret. Dravian hadn’t cared, but he’d listened. He was nothing if not a gracious dealer. His clients got as much of his time as they needed, though he’d helped him to the door in the end. The hardware store would be closed today to get ready for the festival.

Dravian absentmindedly hung bright orange and black decorations all around the ceiling of the store. He’d had a pumpkin brought in from Weston ranch and had it placed just outside the door, on it’s left, welcoming customers with an on-brand jack—o-latntern smile he’d carved into the pumpkin himself. He came down off the ladder he was on and went to the door, staring out of the top pane of glass. Main Street was absolutely packed. Cars had been parallel parked on either side of the road though thankfully he’d gotten back in to claim the spot right in front of the store for his bike. Dravian inhaled in and out. He saw families and passersby crowding the sidewalks and a procession of animals slowly making their way down the road. Considering there were wooden cages on the wagons filled with different types of animals, Dravian was betting on a petting zoo somewhere on the strip. He’d have to go down and see about that later. He’d had the pumpkin brought in from Weston ranch, but he hadn’t ever had the chance to meet the owner himself. He wondered what he was like.

But for now, he had someone else he wanted to see. Dravian navigated through the aisles and came out in front of his register. He hopped over the desk instead of simply walking around and opened the locked door that led to the back room. He sat down at a lone table under a lone halogen bulb and opened a ledger. He marked off the painting as a completed sale and took the fat manila envelope stuffed with payment from the table and added the cash to a safe off to the side of the room next to exposed brick on the floor. It was an older safe that only needed a combination to open. He input the combination and opened up the black and gold structure, placing the money on top of a pile he was currently building a tower out of it. It itself sat next to four other towers that were already filled to the top. Dravian shook his head before closing the door and spinning the combination dial. He’d need a new safe soon. With that done, he exited the back room, locked the door back, pocketed the keys and then headed out of the hardware store. He locked the front door with the same set of keys, pocketed them again, then turned to head down the street to the right. The hardware store was situated on one end of Main Street and where he needed to get to was more the middle of the strip.

There was someone he needed to see at Black Lantern Apothecary. The festival was just around the corner, but he knew he could catch her before all the festivities began. She was probably his best client and Dravian always made time for his best clients. Well, her and two others around town. But she would be the easiest to find at this time of day. Dravian pocketed his hands against the cold as it nipped at him through the clothing. He made sure to walk slowly and purposefully, taking it all in. Here was his new life, right in front of him and the town itself was coming to life on the eve of its Halloween festival. Dravian nodded. He knew he’d made the right choice. He could settle down here for sure. He could build a life here for sure.

He would never be found here, for sure. The memories of what he did flashed in his mind, jumbled and erratic. He knew he couldn’t outrun it forever, but he had to try. Pine Ridge represented a fresh start and in the six months he’d been there, he’d learn to love the town and it’s people who all knew each other somehow and who were mostly just good people. He hated that what he’d done could bring the wrath of reality down on them, but as long as he lived a normal life and did his jobs hours outside of Pine Ridge, no one would be the wiser. That was the rule. A job could never be done in Pine Ridge lest the news of said job could possibly reach the retribution waiting to bring the hammer down on Dravian. He shook his head against the cold and breathed out mist.

He wouldn’t be found here. He’d make sure of that.



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Hidden 21 days ago Post by PatientBean
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PatientBean Hi, I'm Barbie. What's up?

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#966283 ....|..... outfit .....|..... sherrif's station, medical lab




Death.

Something feared, something cherished.

To many, it is a thing to be avoided. Never talked about, never spoken of, never hinted at or joked about lest the prophecy become true. Despite the horrors that happen every day that result in loss, death is a topic no one wants to bring up. Even at funerals, the topic is often glossed over with good-natured jokes, fond stories of yore, or just completely darkened with booze.

Some cultures revere death. The Day of the Dead is a celebration. Some see death as a new beginning.

To Evereigh, death is just another part of life.

As she sat on her wobbly chair in front of her computer, hand holding the mouse but not moving it, her mind wandered to how she got here. Both the town and her chosen career. There aren't many young girls who fantasize about working with the dead when they get older, and the ones that do are often labeled as weird, odd, or serial killers.

Sometimes all three at once.

She knew this career she chose wasn't so much chosen as it was ordained. Like those who feel compelled by their god to follow a certain path, Evereigh felt the universe had called her into this position. She had a mind for it. A knack. A calling to be the speaker of the dead. A voice to the voiceless.

The one thing she knew about her role became clearer and clearer as years passed. She had to do this. She had to make sense of the senseless, to answer questions, to fill in the blanks. And while this town didn't have nearly as many mysterious or unexplainable deaths as she had grown accustomed to, it did have its moments.

When she applied for the job, she was sure she would be turned away because of her experience. Why would a choice medical examiner from Massachusetts want to be a small town's coroner and unlucky mortician? While she didn't give the full truth to that question, she didn't lie either. She needed a job, she was qualified for the role, and she wanted to be somewhere that wasn't a huge city or a metropolis. Did it matter, really?

At the end of the day, it did not. She was given the job, and she worked hard. She gradually became a fixture of the town. She would eat at the diner or grab a coffee before work. She shopped at the local establishments. She greeted the other law enforcement officers and the sheriff when she passed.

And yet, she never felt connected to the town. Not in any meaningful way. It wasn't like she hated it here. It wasn't that the locals were rude or mean or made her feel unwelcome. It was just a vibe. Like something in the town didn't want her here, or was uncertain as to who she was and what she could do.

And that made her sound crazy. So she kept quiet. Hunkered down and did her job. Usually, there wasn't a whole lot she could do other than file paperwork. The occasional dead person cropped up, but was usually either from an accident or natural causes. No unanswered questions there. Mr. Summers crashed his car into a tree and that's all she wrote. Even if Evereigh had wanted more, the facts were clear.

She wasn't bored, necessarily. She knew what she was signing up for when she took the job. And some interesting cases came across her lab. She knew it wouldn't be like those crime drama shows where the medical examiner was, for some reason, working with the police to solve the crimes by going to suspects' homes or running after the bad guys. If she did her job correctly, she never needed to leave her office.

But, she had to admit, she wanted a bit more. With Halloween approaching, perhaps it would be different today. It would be more.

She wouldn't hold her breath.



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Hidden 17 days ago 17 days ago Post by webboysurf
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webboysurf Live, Laugh, Love

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#00aeef ....|..... outfit .....|..... Dev's House -> Sheriff's Station


"In the pines, in the pines, where the sun don’t ever shine…"

The voice came out more like a croak, whispered softly through lips that still stank of burnt coffee and liquor. The scents got lost in the odors of the old house just off Main Street; a musty leather sofa, old newspaper, cooking gas, bacon, old wood, and that crisp smell of cold air coming from the bathroom window. Dev had been meaning to call Harlan up to get it fixed, but he’d been too busy. He was busy buttoning his tan uniformed shirt and smoothing the freshly ironed fabric to make himself presentable. He caught his reflection in the bathroom mirror, frowning as he caught the glint of yet another gray hair in his eyebrows.

"I will shiver the whole night through…"

He stepped out into his bedroom, quickly walking past the old mattress and box spring that laid in the center of the cramped room. He never quite got around to buying himself an actual bed frame. His foot caught an empty bottle of whiskey, eliciting a wince as it tipped and rolled under his dresser. It was an old, unbalanced thing that came with the house, more of a hassle to move than to just let sit. A couple old mysteries still sat atop it that had a coat of dust on their covers. There wasn’t much time for reading these days, at least when it came to fiction.

"Her husband was a hard-working man…"

The TV in the living room hadn’t seen much use lately. It was hard to catch a signal on satellite when the weather was bad, and the days he came home sober enough to turn on whatever new shit the networks were broadcasting often left him disappointed. Not like he paid much attention to them anyways. Several oversized brown folders were sprawled open on the coffee table, containing incident reports and lined yellow paper with hand-written notes sprawled illegibly. The wall next to the TV had a large map of Pine Ridge taped to a very large cork board. A few little scraps of notepad paper were pinned with red and black thumbtacks containing names, dates, and times. It was unorganized, unconnected, and useless. He had hoped that staring at it enough might eventually provide some insight on what the fuck was happening to the people of Pine Ridge. A couple mostly-empty beer bottles were lined on the floor next to his spot on the couch. He’d clean them up another time, when he could finally muster up the energy to do anything but stew in the defeat that came from his thankless job.

He didn’t even look at the map or the files that morning. He shoved his work into a black leather briefcase with his initials engraved on the handle, the last birthday gift he had gotten before the big fight in Chicago. It was the last vestige of a time when he actually felt accomplished and in control, of a time when cases had answers. He didn’t even know why he bothered keeping the files open, bringing them home and reading them again and taking the same notes over and over. It was sisyphean, his own personal punishment for years of neglect and selfishness bundled into a never-ending cascade of having to repeat the same tired platitudes to the worried people in town. Pine Ridge was a black hole that would suck them all in and wipe them from existence if they stayed long enough. Dev was just one of the sorry souls who had to wait their turn.

Or maybe that was just the alcohol talking.

The song died in the sheriff’s throat, as he closed the latch of his briefcase shut with a sharp click. He let it sit on the coffee table for a moment as he moved to the kitchen, grabbing the bottle of mouthwash that sat next to the dish soap and old sponge. He swished the liquid around in his mouth until he felt satisfied the cool mint would disguise the whiskey enough to pass before spitting it onto a small pile of old dishes. He grabbed his coat, his briefcase, and slipped out the front door that slammed far too hard when it closed.

It was going to be a long day.


"Terry… I need you near the mine, just in case some tourists want to try and sneak in early for a private tour. Last thing we need is a repeat of last year."

It was hard to call it a roll call when it was just Dev and his two employees in his office. He had a small map in front of him, a photocopy of the festival layout he had gotten from the mayor’s aide. He didn’t have the extra deputy they had last year, given the former sheriff’s untimely demise. All he had left under his purview was a solitary deputy and his desk officer. Deputy Theresa Leighton, Terry for short, was a stocky woman with a warm smile permanently etched on her face. She was in her late twenties, having grown up on a farm two towns over. Her family had sold their place a couple years back, which left her needing a new job. Not a lot of folks were exactly clambering to join law enforcement in rural South Dakota. She was good at her job, if a little too polite and green around the gills. She was another body with a badge to keep things civil, which was about all Dev could ask for these days. Officer William Gibbons was a crotchety old man who had been working at the front desk longer than anyone could remember. His shock of white hair was delicately combed over, his eyes laser focused on Dev behind a set of horn-rimmed glasses. He was taking this far more seriously than Terry or Dev were.

The sheriff shrugged his shoulders. The assignments were easy. Terry would stick around the far side of town by the mines for most of the day, mostly to make sure that no one got lost in the mines and needed rescue. Dev would stick around Main Street with most of the festival. It would do well to keep up appearances, and to be near where the drunkest and rowdiest tourists would congregate. He was expecting to put at least a handful in the drunk tank to sleep things off, if he was lucky. And, of course, Officer Gibbons would spend his evening when he had his fill of the festival reading at his desk and babysitting the poor saps who Dev brought in. It was a functional enough system, if things went according to plans. If they didn’t, he’d think of something on the fly. "If either of you need a few hours this afternoon to rest, I can cover for you. It’s a long shift."

Terry nodded appreciatively. ”I… wouldn’t mind seeing some of the festival. Halloween only comes once a year.”

Dev sighed, leaning back in his chair as he looked up at the deputy. He lifted a pen to scratch at the back of his head. She did deserve a chance to participate in the festival, at least a little bit. She had a lot of years left before she grew jaded with large gatherings. "That’s… yeah. Ok. Let’s see." He glanced at the schedule of the festival, mulling over the idea in his head. He did need to be in the thick of it from the jump, and most folks didn’t get too belligerently drunk until closer to the end. There was a sweet spot in the middle where things should, in theory, be a little less chaotic. "Tell you what… We can swap for a little bit after the first hour. No drinking while on duty, but you can mingle with folks and participate. Deal?" Terry nodded appreciatively. The sheriff looked to Officer Gibbons expectantly, but he simply shook his head. The old man was happy to sit in the quiet station and read, as his festival days had long since passed. With no other questions or concerns, Dev just clapped his hands together. "Alrighty… Radio in if something comes up."



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Hidden 15 days ago Post by Qia
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Qia A Little Weasel

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............ #94260e ....|..... outfit .....|..... rafael's place ..............

The cocoa tea took twenty minutes to make properly, and Rafael Fontenelle had not rushed a single one of them in over a hundred years. He stood at the small stove in the kitchen above Heritage Antiques, sleeves rolled to his elbows and bare feet cold on the linoleum. If yuh cyah make it right, he thought as he recalled his mother's exact words, doh call it cocoa tea. She had been pretty adamant on that point. You could add cinnamon or a strip of orange peel. You could even use milk, water, or a combination of both, but the cacao had to be roasted properly, and the stirring had to be one direction only, and if you rushed it, you might as well drink hot water and pretend. She, however, had not been a woman who tolerated pretense in her kitchen. That was perhaps the only lesson from childhood that had survived every other loss.

The kitchen was small enough that three steps in any direction brought him to a wall. Rafael didn't mind the confines, nevertheless, as he had never needed much room. Two centuries of accumulation had filled every available surface with things that had no particular order to them: a ceramic bowl he'd had since Trinidad, glazed a colour the local potter no longer made, sat beside a pocket watch that had belonged to a gold rush prospector who never came back for it, beside a folded map of the Black Hills that was technically his own property and technically older than the tourism board that now printed newer versions of it. There was also a bundle of dried sage hung from a nail above the stove, tied with twine that had gone grey with age. A single coffee mug—chipped, unremarkable, the one he reached for every morning—sat upside down on a rag beside the sink. He poured the tea into that same cup and took a sip, the heat moving through him in a way that had nothing to do with temperature. His nerves, after his transformation, seemed to register warmth differently and were more of a remembered sensation rather than a current one. But the flavour was real. The bitterness of the cacao. The sweetness of the milk. The bit of cinnamon on his tongue. That, at least, had never faded.

He took the cup and moved to the sitting room, settling into the leather Chesterfield. The book he'd left open on the side table the night before was exactly where he'd placed it. It was a collection of essays published in Port of Spain in 1847, the pages soft with age and handling. He picked it up without looking at it and found his page by feel.

Meanwhile, the town was setting up outside. He could hear it through the old timber walls. Voices carrying on the cold morning air. The hollow thud of something wooden being unloaded from a truck bed. The distant crackle of a speaker being tested, a brief burst of music, then silence, then music again. Pine Ridge had done Halloween before. Small things. Porch lights and children in costumes, and the saloon doing more business than usual. He had watched that version of it for decades without much interest. But this, the sheer volume of it, was quite different. He wasn't sure yet what he thought about different, but he supposed that eventually he’d make up his mind one way or another.

He read for a while. The essays were familiar enough that his eyes moved across the pages without demanding much of him, which was partly the point. The author, a man named Álvarez, had been possessed of strong opinions about colonial governance and about the particular violence of having one's homeland described by people who had never set foot in it. He had been a difficult man, by all accounts, petty in his feuds and vindictive when crossed. But he had been right about enough things that Rafael had, in 1848, forgiven him his flaws. And he agreed with most of it today. Most. Not all. In his twenties, it was easier to believe in absolutes. In his two-hundred-and-tenth year, on the other hand, he had come to understand that most was often the best anyone could honestly claim, and that anyone who told you otherwise was either selling something or lying to themselves.

He still thought of Trinidad every so often, but he was not sure he was still of it in the way Álvarez meant. The island existed in him the way his mother's voice existed in him, in that it was foundational and yet, at the same time, entirely out of reach. He could remember the exact pitch of her laughter and the way she pronounced certain words with a softness that had no equivalent in English. But he could not have it. Not anymore. Just the same, he could not go back to a place and find it the way he’d left it after so many years. He could only go back and find out how much had changed without him. And Rafael had not been back. He could not go back. He wished he could go back.

The author, apparently unbothered by such complications, went on to describe Port of Spain in the dry season, like the heat settling heavily over the city in the late afternoon and the smell of the sea coming in off the Gulf of Paria when the wind shifted just enough to carry it inland. Rafael had not thought about that smell in years. He sat with the book open in his lap and did not turn the page.

The thing about memory, he had learned across two centuries, was that it did not diminish the way people assumed it would. They said time healed things. They said distance helped. What they did not say, because most of them, in fairness, did not live long enough to find out, was that memory past a certain point stopped being something that happened to you and became something you carried. Permanently and without the option of setting it down. The smell of the Gulf of Paria was still in him as precisely as it had been in his childhood years, along with his mother's kitchen and the weight of humidity against his skin in the rainy season. Along with the sound of his infant sibling crying in the next room, the cry he had learned to distinguish from hunger or discomfort or the simple, unexplained distress of being very small in a very large world.

Outside, something crashed—a wooden panel, by the sound of it, hitting the ground with the splintering crack of cheap construction—and a collective groan rose from the street below, followed immediately by laughter.

Rafael blinked.

The sitting room came back into focus, and he looked down at the cup in his hand and found it empty. That happened occasionally, time passing him by without him accounting for it. He had never really decided whether that was a quality of his vampirism or simply of himself. Perhaps there was no longer a meaningful difference between the two, and Rafael Fontenelle and the vampire had merged so completely across the decades that trying to separate them was like trying to separate the cacao from the tea. You could do it, in theory, but you would surely ruin both in the process.

He unfolded himself from the Chesterfield and carried the cup back to the kitchen, running cold water over it in the sink before washing it properly. Through the window above the sink, he could see a narrow strip of Main Street between the buildings opposite. Strangers mostly. A woman with a child on her shoulders was pointing at something out of his sightline. Two men were consulting a map with expressions suggesting it was not helping. And then, at the edge of his vision, a flash of red hair moving quickly down the road, there and gone before he could try and place it.

Rafael set the cup down on the rag beside the sink and stood at the window for a moment longer than he meant to before going to grab his coat.


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Hidden 14 days ago Post by xNocturnax
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#b899ff ....|..... outfit .....|..... main street




She sat in her car, one hand’s fingers clenched tightly on the steering wheel while her other hand hovered over the keys, ready to twist it over to bring the ignition to life and leave the town of Pine Ridge behind and finally in the rearview. She had been in this exact spot once…twice before. But she hesitated. Always hesitated. Even when she hated it.

Her hand eased away from the keys and joined the steering wheel, gripping it impossibly tighter as she squeezed her eyes shut. “Fuck,” she muttered to herself and threw her head back against the headrest in defeat.

Gradually, her hands withdrew to her lap, admitting complete surrender to the pull of the town. To the pull of the pack. It was something she couldn’t leave behind. Nobody ever said ‘stay’ and nobody demanded ‘go’, they were just always silently and sturdily supportive.

Several minutes passed by like this. Danica sat silent and still in her car with her eyes closed, seemingly napping or maybe even meditating to the outside world, while her thoughts run rampant. She gulped as flashes of her attack ruled her mind – she would say vengeance kept her here, but it had been months and she hadn’t seen the man – the wolf, that attacked her and the pack was oddly hush about it. Dani had never asked outright but they shared thoughts telepathically and they were rather sealed on who was responsible and why and where the hell he was now…where other thoughts ran quite freely and openly.

Regardless, as it always did, her troubled mind eventually turned to resolve. She’d stay to stop that from happening to anyone else. Fatalities. Torture. Turning unwillingly into something. That was part of the wolves’ cause.

She pulled the keys back and climbed out of the car, locking it up, glancing up at the sky obscured by grey clouds. After months, she still didn’t identify or quite settle into Pine Ridge as home. She still had that same motel room booked. Hadn’t settled into any job. Didn’t bother to make friends much beyond a smile or small talk. Never got personal. The closest person she had come to know was the owner of the motel, Dottie and that was to explain her extended stay and so they could arrange a tailored payment plan when her pockets ran inevitably shallow.

Dani walked along the street, hands buried in her pockets, aiming to pass by quietly and lightly on her feet as a ghost and reach the diner. She’d tuck herself into a booth against the window, facing the door as normal with a hot brew of coffee planted between her palms like any other day. But instead, she slowed and swivelled to watch people manoeuvre large props and haybales around. Locals littered the main street to decorate their town for a Halloween festival, working in unison to achieve their goal.
It almost looked innocent and wholesome of the small town. But it was displays like this that particularly clenched at her gut and gnawed at her being. Why would anyone ever have reason to assume werewolves and vampires and witches were a thing? They looked so ordinary. For the most part. Perfect for blindsiding newcomers and tourists. Just like her once. She wondered if they knew the elusive guise they put forward. If the locals — the humans, knew of the special beings they were holed up in town with.

A strained grunt followed by a clatter turned her attention to a tipped table across the road, where a pumpkin rolled a foot away and fake webs and lights toppled out of a box. Danica jogged over, helping them recollect their décor.

“Oh, thank you.”

She moved automatically to push the foldable table up, cloaked in a white cloth. The second they applied weight and replaced the box, the table leg caved again, almost making it topple over towards her once more. Danica caught it and reached under to adjust the hazardous iffy leg, pushing it out properly.

“It’s rather finicky. Don’t worry too much about it, dear,” the lady assured.

She grabbed the opposite leg on the same short side and — the sharp sound of a horn had her yank the adjustable height, getting her index finger abrasively pincered between the metal bars while the table slanted now. Dani jerked her hand away with a hiss shaking her hand out.

“Oh my.”

Impossible pain tolerance wasn’t part of the wolf package regrettably, and Dani was caught looking between the lady scolding the table on her behalf, dismissing the whole structure muttering about getting a new one and the direction the horn blared while her finger stung and turned red.

She stiffened, ears all but pricking up to the confrontation further down the road, away from the main bustle. The cowboy vampire. She wondered if this was one of those things she’d have to step into to protect — the albeit idiot — tourist. But she also knew it was a battle she wouldn’t win. He was older, experienced, stronger. Knew the Boones might reprimand her for confronting the cowboy of all people and starting something over nothing. So she stayed in place, still as a rock waiting and observing.

The tension in her shoulders eased fractionally when the van reversed the way he came. Vampire and tourist parted for now. But she stared a moment longer, as if for good measure and to confirm they had really got away unscathed. Physically.

Dani looked back at the lady and flashed a smile. Something between apology and warmth, hurrying to fix the table one final time. “We'll get it,” she assured. And sure enough, table legs were hard set in place and set at the same height to finally make for a sturdy structure.

A small task by all means but the lady's smile and the tiny contribution gave Dani feeling of...gratification.

Community.



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Hidden 13 days ago Post by Sleepy Tani
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Sleepy Tani Needs A Nap

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#9fc9a8 ....|..... outfit ............... #737e62 ....|..... outfit ............... around town


Morning light crawled slowly across the cabin floorboards, pale gold slipping through the frost-kissed window beside Charlotte's bed and stretching long across thick rugs and worn wood. The fire in the little stove had died sometime during the night, leaving behind dark coals and the lingering scent of smoke buried into the walls. Cold had crept in while she slept, settling into blankets and pillows and the exposed slope of her shoulder where she'd kicked half the comforter away hours ago. The cabin itself still carried pieces of Warren and Harlan in it if she looked hard enough. The uneven shelf near the far wall leaned just slightly because Warren swore he could eyeball measurements better than a level, and Harlan had hammered the little hooks beside the door in crooked because he'd been laughing too hard at one of her complaints to pay attention.

Her phone began vibrating angrily against the nightstand. Charlotte groaned into her pillow before blindly slapping a hand toward the sound and dragging the thing beneath the blankets with her like it had personally offended her. One eye cracked open. The other stayed shut out of principle. "Hhllo?" she mumbled, except the word came out somewhere between a grunt and a dying animal noise.

A warm laugh immediately crackled through the speaker. "Morning, sunshine!" Warren's voice rolled easily through the phone, entirely too awake for the hour. Charlotte stared at the ceiling with the deep exhaustion of someone reconsidering every friendship she'd ever made. "Need you to go pick up Harlan. I stole his truck. Free oil changes for a year if you play taxi."

Silence stretched for a beat while Charlotte rubbed both hands down her face hard enough to drag skin with it. "You already give me free oil changes." Another pause, the line went dead. "God, I hate you."

She didn't, obviously. Not even a little. Still muttering under her breath, Charlotte eventually dragged herself out of bed and wandered toward the tiny bathroom attached beside the bedroom. By the time she emerged, she'd managed to look mostly alive again. Olive cargo pants sat low at her waist beneath a worn dark tank while an oversized charcoal corduroy button-up (stolen directly from Harlan’s closet) hung open overtop. Her hair still carried curls from sleep, messy in a way she'd given up fighting years ago, and a small stone pendant rested against her collarbone while she shoved necessities into her backpack. Temperatures had dropped overnight, but it wasn't cold enough to justify effort.

Not even twenty minutes later her old Jeep Laredo rumbled down the road toward Harlan's place. The thing looked exactly like something Charlotte McCoy would drive; sun-faded copper paint, oversized tires still carrying dried mud along the wheel wells, leather seats worn smooth with age, and enough personality crammed into the vehicle to qualify as sentient at times. The doors were still off, because things like "weather protection" and "reasonable choices" had never interested her much, though she knew it was only a matter of time before Warren showed up to put them back on while she was sleeping. Pine trees blurred by while cold wind threaded through loose strands of hair and rushed through the cabin. By the time Harlan's cabin came into view, Charlotte was already snickering to herself.

She pulled right up beneath his bedroom window and threw the Jeep into park with absolutely no shame whatsoever. The engine idled loudly while she leaned across the seat and looked up toward the cabin with complete confidence in her life choices. Then she slammed her hand against the horn and held it there. Once. Twice. Three times for good measure. "Rise and shine, Boone!" she shouted out the open side of the Jeep, voice carrying through crisp morning air. "Get your ass up! I know your old man routine includes coffee and pretending you're mysterious before noon!" Her smile widened slightly as she settled back into her seat. Honestly, she didn't mind. Harlan liked his morning coffee from the diner, Warren had stolen his truck like the menace he was, and both of them had built her home with their own hands. Families came in all sorts of weird shapes.

Holidays were meant for sleeping in and while his alarm was still set to go off in about two minutes, that didn’t make him anymore prepared for the rude awakening that pulled up outside his house. When the horn blared just beyond his bedroom window, Harlan woke with such startling force that he rolled over abruptly, blankets twisting around him just before he tipped over the edge and landed face down on the cold, hard floor. He groaned against the old tattered area rug, feeling the wolf stir just beneath his skin, under the haze of morning grogginess. A growl rumbled in his chest as he pushed off the ground. He peeled the blankets from where they knotted around him and tossed them onto the bed before stumbling half awake through his small cabin.

His fingers curled around the handle to the front door and yanked it open with enough unintentional brute force that he nearly ripped it from its hinges, only stopping when he heard the wood groan and splinter beneath the pressure. "Charlotte Ann McCoy—" Harlan took one step forward, paused, then turned to find a hot pink post-it note stuck to the window of his door with his brother’s chicken scratch scrawled across it.

Stole the old clanker. Don’t worry, didn’t hot wire it this time. Charlotte will pick you up, I’m going to harass her. See you at the festival! (You have to dress up this year dude, or you can wear the costume I got you?)

Harlan drew in a deep breath, the frigid morning air burning the inside of his lungs as he dragged his gaze over to the spot where he usually parked his truck, finding it glaringly void of said truck. "Asshole," he grumbled under his breath as he stepped out onto his porch. Bare feet thudded against the rough, uneven planks as he walked the length of his house toward the loud, roaring Jeep that sat waiting for him. He stepped into view, black hair faintly streaked gray stood up, wild and untamed in every direction. His arms were crossed over his bare chest, while old long johns, worn and tattered along the knees and hems clung to his legs, and dangled precariously from his hips. "Turn off that dinosaur before you put another hole in the ozone layer and get your ass inside, I still gotta shower."

Before she could say anything else, Harlan trudged his way back inside, leaving the front door wide open, knowing damn well she was going to follow… because she always did. He didn’t wait around to hear the engine shut off or for the loud heavy thuds of Charlie’s hiking boots walking along the porch before he hopped into the shower.

Charlotte grinned to herself the moment the engine died beneath her hand, satisfaction settling warm in her chest as silence finally reclaimed the morning. Harlan looked exactly like she expected him to look after being ripped out of sleep; hair exploding in every direction, eyes narrowed beneath a glare that had absolutely no bite behind it, old long johns hanging on through sheer determination. She slipped out of the Jeep and hurried up the porch steps before the cold could settle properly into her skin, brushing past him with a casual bump of her shoulder as she ducked into the cabin. "Morning to you too, sweetheart." She called out after him.

By the time Harlan disappeared into the shower, Charlotte had already declared war on his kitchen. Cabinet doors opened and shut while she inspected shelves with increasing disappointment etched across her face. Crackers. Beef jerky. Three cans of soup. Why did men live like abandoned forest cryptids? Her nose wrinkled before she finally unearthed a box of blueberry Pop-Tarts shoved toward the back of the pantry, slightly dusty. "Blueberry?" she muttered aloud with genuine offense. "Disgusting." Still, she tore one open and threw herself across the couch like a cat claiming territory, socked feet hanging over one armrest as she crunched through her mediocre breakfast with all the dignity of a raccoon stealing food from a campsite.

It didn’t take him long to get cleaned, ten minutes tops. Harlan took as long as any man did to dry off, so barely at all, ruffling his hair with a towel before tying it around his waist to catch whatever drips still ran along his skin. He quickly wet his toothbrush and put a dollop of toothpaste along the bristles before he stepped back out into the small common area of his cabin. His gaze drifted over toward Charlie, lazy, tired, and definitely annoyed. "Why do you let Warren rope you into his shit?" he grumbled. He raised his brows toward her as he started brushing his teeth and wandering his way back down the hall toward his bedroom.

About ten minutes later she heard footsteps crossing old floorboards and tipped her head toward him, immediately snorting at the expression on his face. "Free oil changes," she deadpanned around another bite, because they both knew perfectly well Warren already serviced her Jeep for free. Her eyes swept over him once before she huffed out a laugh and balled up the wrapper in her hands. "Aren't you cold? Jeez, you're like a dog. Go dry off." She wandered toward the kitchen as she spoke, tossing the wrapper neatly into the trash before her attention snagged on the coffee maker sitting abandoned on the counter. Brows furrowed, she picked up the coffee tin and opened it, only to stare down at the empty bottom with visible disappointment. Then she opened the fridge and stared inside for a long moment, expression flattening further with every shelf, darkening when she spotted the expiration date on his milk. Men, she sighed internally, already rearranging her plans for the day while eyeing his kitchen with the grim resolve of someone preparing humanitarian aid.

"Do I look cold?" he grumbled around the toothbrush in his mouth as he hooked his foot on the bedroom door and pushed it most of the way closed. Harlan had just pulled the towel from his waist and paused, naked and confused with furrowed brows as he stared at the ceiling. "Free oil changes?" he echoed in disbelief, before tossing aside his towel and wandering into his closet for fresh clothes.

Charlie glanced toward him at the first question and immediately regretted it. Morning light spilled across the room in pale gold bands, catching against damp skin and broad shoulders while steam still curled faintly through the half-open bedroom door behind him. Her eyes lingered for exactly one second too long before she snapped them upward toward the ceiling with remarkable determination. Heat crept warm into her cheeks despite herself.

"...No," she admitted with a short snort, lips twitching helplessly at the corners. "Certainly not cold." The smile that followed widened further when his deeply offended repetition of free oil changes floated back out from the bedroom. She leaned back against the couch cushions, folding her arms loosely while laughter hummed low in her chest. "You know Warren thinks he's negotiating like some powerful businessman every time he offers that, right?"

"Yeah well, he also thinks he’s Casanova," Harlan called out from his closet as he tossed the first set of clean, wearable clothing he could find onto the bed.

Charlotte wrinkled her nose immediately, expression souring with the practiced ease of someone who'd spent years putting up with Warren Boone's nonsense. Still sprawled across Harlan's couch, she shifted deeper into the cushions and crossed her ankles lazily while staring toward the bedroom doorway. "He needs someone to ground him," she called back, shaking her head. "He's getting too old for whatever personality crisis he's having being single."

"Don’t look at me," he replied, calling over his shoulder as he slipped one foot into the leg of his jeans. "I honestly don’t know if there’s anyone in this town that can… He’s already dated half of them." Harlan jumped once, denim clinging to his damp legs that he definitely didn’t dry properly before getting dressed. "Unless you’re offering." He chuckled, just once, too quiet for Charlie to hear. But just the thought alone was humorous.

Charlotte's entire face wrinkled immediately, nose scrunching as though he'd suggested she lick the bottom of a boot. The reaction came so fast and so genuine that there wasn't a shred of room for interpretation. "Absolutely not," she snorted.

One hand waved vaguely through the air as she tried to untangle a stubborn curl that had wrapped itself around another. Her head shook with such conviction it sent loose strands bouncing around her shoulders. "If I ever try, I'd trust you to take me straight to the hospital and get my head checked," she informed him solemnly. "Because nothing short of severe head trauma could make me want to date Warren."

Harlan laughed wryly as he zipped up and buttoned his pants. "You have any idea how many bets that’d settle if you both dated?" He blew a quiet raspberry that made the damp hair that hung in front of his forehead bounce slightly. "Eh, you’re a handful. Warren wouldn’t know what to do with you," he added before taking a second to give his teeth a bit more of a proper brushing.

Charlotte gasped so loudly it echoed through the cabin, her hand flying dramatically to her chest as though Harlan had just delivered the cruelest insult imaginable. The couch cushions shifted beneath her as she sat upright, dark curls bouncing around her shoulders while indignation flooded across her face in exaggerated waves. Somewhere between offended and amused, she looked like she was seconds away from filing a formal complaint.

"I'm not a handful!" she called toward the bedroom, scandalized. "Stop being dramatic!" Her brows knit together as she pointed accusingly in the general direction of his voice. "I am delightful. Easygoing, even." As if to prove her point, she threw her hair over her shoulder and attempted to look as easy going as possible. The effect was lost on him, as he was in a different room, but it was the thought that counted. "And for the record, Warren's the handful. I just happen to be standing nearby when his bad ideas occur."

Harlan snorted around his toothbrush and rolled his eyes. "Yeah, ok."

A few minutes later he reappeared, jeans fastened around his waist, towel hanging over his shoulder, fresh shirt and socks clutched in his left hand, and his toothbrush tucked in his right cheek. He returned to the bathroom to rinse his mouth and hang up the towel, and by the time he found his way to the living room with Charlie, he was pulling the shirt over his head. Harlan lowered himself onto the couch beside her, taking his time to pull on his socks and old work boots one at a time. "You know, the least he could do is leave behind his bike if he’s gonna steal my truck," he grumbled more to himself than anything. When he braced his right boot against the coffee table and started lacing it, he spared Charlie a quick sidelong glance, continued tying it, paused, then looked over at her again with creased brows. "Is that my shirt?"

Charlotte's smile remained fixed on her face, dimpling her left cheek as she shoved her feet back into her hiking boots and looked at him with complete innocence she absolutely did not possess. Morning light spilled through the cabin windows behind him, catching on damp strands of his hair and stretching warm bands of gold across the floorboards between them. She looked perfectly settled there, perfectly at home, sitting on his couch in his shirt like she'd been wandering in and out of his cabin for years because, truthfully, she had. "Yup," she chirped, popping the p with enough cheerfulness to be irritating on purpose. "I've got four more hanging in my closet too."

"And let me guess," he started, tugging the hem of his jeans over the laced boot before dropping his foot to the ground, then propping up the other one to start lacing it. "If I just bought you shirts—same size, style, and everything—it wouldn’t be the same?" Harlan looked over at her from beneath wet locks that fell lazy and unkempt in front of his face, dripping water onto the collar of his shirt and the denim along his thighs.

Charlotte hummed thoughtfully like he'd presented her with a genuinely difficult philosophical question, tapping her pointer finger lightly against her chin while she pretended to consider it with grave seriousness. Morning light caught against the grin slowly threatening across her mouth as she looked over at him sprawled there lacing up his boots, damp hair hanging into his face and dripping onto his shirt collar. "I mean..." she started slowly, dragging the words out for effect. "You could certainly try." Her smirk widened immediately afterward, all crooked amusement and unrepentant fondness. "I'm always looking to expand my wardrobe."

"Hmm," he grumbled, the sound low and gravely coming from somewhere deep in his chest. "So, you’re what happened to my favorite red flannel?" Harlan didn’t look over at her, merely shaking his head, sending small droplets of water flicking off his locks and running along his jaw. "You could at least steal the clothes I don’t like."

Charlotte's mouth immediately pulled into a small pout at the accusation. She tightened her arms stubbornly across her chest while looking entirely unrepentant. "But then it wouldn't be the same," she mumbled.

Her eyes flicked briefly toward the flannel hanging from his shoulders before returning to him, expression carrying the quiet certainty of someone who thought this was perfectly reasonable. "Your good shirts are softer." She paused. "And they smell better." Then, realizing how that sounded, she immediately frowned at the opposite wall. "That came out weird."

He rolled his eyes and snorted quietly. "I feel like it’d be easier to just steal my cologne."

Charlotte shook her head immediately, stubbornness settling into her expression with familiar ease. One curl finally slipped free from the tangle only to bounce right back across her shoulder again and become tangled once more. "It wouldn't be the same," she said firmly.

Her arms crossed over her chest as though that settled the matter entirely. In Charlie's mind, it did. "Besides, stealing your shirts is practically a tradition at this point." She glanced over at him, smile tugging at one corner of her mouth. "I'm not about to abandon decades of hard work."

"Whatever you say," Harlan conceded with a faint shake of his head.

She leaned forward slightly, resting her elbows against her knees while watching him lace up his boots with quiet amusement still tugging at the corners of her mouth. Harlan always moved through mornings with this sort of sleepy irritation that never quite landed properly, all rough edges and grumbles. Charlotte had spent enough years around him to know exactly where the real annoyance stopped and the theatrics started. Her eyes drifted briefly toward the kitchen again as she mentally added groceries to the growing list of things she'd apparently be handling today, before something Warren had said earlier floated back into her head.

"Hey, do you have a costume for the Halloween festival yet?" she asked casually, though there was already laughter threatening beneath the question. She watched him for a moment, fully aware of the answer before he'd even give it. Harlan never dressed up anymore. Not since they were kids running through the woods with cheap masks and pillowcases stuffed with candy. "If not..." she continued slowly, lips beginning to curl, "...you might wanna sort something out soon." She bit down against the smile trying to escape and failed miserably. "Warren said he got you both some cheap vampire costumes."

Harlan’s foot slipped from the edge of the coffee table and landed on the ground with a loud, incredulous thud. He stared at Charlie like a second head might sprout out of her shoulder at any minute, or maybe she had brain damage. Both were possible. He groaned, loud and far more dramatic than necessary as he ran his hands over his face and back through his damp hair. "I don’t wear costumes," he grumbled, pushing off his knees to stand with the aches, groans, and pops of an old man. "I’ll be a lumberjack." He let out a quiet, amused chuckle as he grabbed his flannel from the coat rack and pulled it on.

"I wouldn’t make a believable vampire anyway. I’m too… hairy." To the universe’s surprise, Harlan actually made a joke. He spared Charlie a sidelong glance that was mostly exhaustion, but there were the faint threads of playfulness hidden somewhere deep beneath it. He pulled open the front door and grimaced at the new squeak and rattle of the hinges. He swung it back and forth a couple times to check it, and even peeked over at the loose screws with a sigh. Something he’d have to fix later. "Come on, crazy. I’d hate to be late for my one day off," he mused, nodding his head toward the outside while holding the door open for her.

Charlotte rolled her eyes so hard it bordered on theatrical as she pushed herself off the couch and followed after him toward the door. Cold mountain air immediately swept through the cabin once he opened it, stirring loose strands of her hair and carrying the sharp scent of pine and damp earth inside with it. "You're always a lumberjack," she corrected dryly, though the amusement in her voice ruined any attempt at sounding serious.

"Well, if it ain’t broke," he replied as he closed the door behind him, not bothering to lock it… Because well, no one in Pine Ridge locked their doors. It wasn’t like he had anything of value and the only people stupid enough to try anything couldn’t cross the threshold without an invitation. He had a key somewhere… probably.

The snort she let out at his vampire comment came quick and genuine, shoulders shaking faintly with it as she stepped onto the porch beside him. Charlotte rolled her eyes fondly, trying not to laugh. "I was unaware vampires couldn't be hairy," she mused thoughtfully. "Are they required to wax? The super secret Volturi government must have made that the third rule, right under no changing babies, and no revealing the super secret secret."

"The fuck’s a Volturi?" Harlan’s face contorted into a confused, half asleep grimace that said he should be disgusted, even if he had no idea what she meant. "I don’t know… Have you ever seen a vampire with a beard?"

Charlotte looked at him like he'd just admitted to kicking puppies for fun, one hand flying dramatically to her chest over her heart as she stared at him in open betrayal. Cold air rushed through the trees around them, stirring her hair while she backed toward the Jeep with complete theatrical devastation written across her face. "Twilight, Harlan. Twilight," she repeated incredulously. "I made you watch every single movie with me in high school. I read the books out loud whenever you annoyed me."

She shook her head slowly, deeply disappointed in him on a spiritual level now. "You cannot tell me you've blocked out some of our fondest memories together." Her eyes narrowed slightly as she pointed accusingly at him. "And for the record, Carlisle absolutely could've pulled off a beard."

Ok, so maybe Harlan did remember once she jogged his memory. He also remembered finding the only tolerable character to be Charlie, but he also wasn’t going to give his Charlie the satisfaction of admitting that. Instead looked around slightly dazed and confused as if he had just been woken up all over again. "Huh? What? Sorry, I was blocking you out."

Charlotte gasped like he'd just committed a personal betrayal of the highest order. Her hand tightened dramatically around the fabric of her shirt while she stared at him in open disbelief, eyes narrowing into an expression that was far too offended to be genuine.

"You wound me." Amusement was already threatening to betray her outrage. Turning briefly, she stuck her tongue out at him with all the maturity of a twelve-year-old. She bumped her shoulder lightly against his as she passed, boots thudding softly against old wooden planks while she twirled her Jeep keys lazily around one finger. Wind stirred the trees surrounding the cabin in slow rolling waves, branches creaking overhead while sunlight filtered pale gold through thinning autumn leaves. Charlotte’s attention drifted toward the woods automatically, years of habit pulling her eyes toward movement and sound without conscious thought. "Honestly, though..." she started after a beat, lips twitching again. "You do kinda have more of a werewolf vibe."

The words trailed thoughtfully from her while she glanced back toward him again, grin widening just enough to deepen the dimple in her left cheek. Harlan looked perpetually one minor inconvenience away from wandering into the forest and becoming folklore, and frankly she felt justified in saying so. She tilted her head slightly, studying him with exaggerated seriousness as she started backing toward the Jeep. "Would you wear a dog tail? Maybe some cute fluffy ears?" she asked finally, entirely too pleased with herself.

Born of instinct, when Charlie looked towards the woods Harlan’s gaze followed, but his easy stature remained, hands still resting in the pockets of his flannel as he followed behind in a slow, lazy stride. He sniffed once, playing it off as the cold or a runny nose, but he didn’t smell anything beyond the normal things that rustled in the underbrush: foxes, squirrels, maybe a coyote. Nothing dangerous. The vamps knew better than to wander around in his and his brother’s neck of the woods. Occasionally a dumbass got reckless, but it was usually safe in that part of the Black Hills… They worked hard to keep it that way.

"Werewolves are cooler anyway," Harlan commented as he dragged his worn, steel-toed boot across his porch, pushing some mulch and dirt over the edge into the small garden. When he looked back up he caught a proper view of her Jeep. His brows furrowed as he pulled a hand from his pocket to point at her. "I’m ignoring that," he commented, not dignifying her desire to turn him into a furry with a comment. Then his hand shifted, sweeping through the air so that he pointed at her car. "Charlotte, where the fuck are your doors? It’s October."

Charlotte made a soft noise of immediate agreement at the statement, nodding once like Harlan had just said something profoundly intelligent instead of defending hypothetical werewolves before seven in the morning. "See? Exactly. Finally, a man of culture." The moment he announced he was ignoring the dog ears and tail suggestion, however, she booed him openly without a shred of shame. Her smile widened as she bounded toward the Jeep anyway, boots crunching over gravel while cold mountain air whipped loose strands of hair across her face. "Coward," she informed him cheerfully as she hauled herself up into the driver's seat.

The Jeep rocked slightly beneath her weight while she shoved the key into the ignition and looked over at him with a smile that already screamed guilty conscience. Morning light filtered pale and thin through the trees surrounding the cabin, catching against the orange of the Jeep's frame and the dried mud caked stubbornly beneath the wheel wells. "I uh... misplaced them?" she offered finally, giving one small shrug that carried absolutely zero sincerity behind it. The engine roared loudly to life beneath her hand, old enough to sound vaguely offended every time it started, and Charlotte quickly reached for her seatbelt before he could judge her life choices any harder than he already was.

"The cold never bothered me anyway," she quoted dramatically, waving one hand vaguely through the air. "Or whatever that Elsa chick said." She smiled faintly as she shifted the Jeep into gear, though amusement still lingered warmly across her face. Honestly, reinstalling the doors took effort, and Charlotte McCoy had never once in her life claimed to be a woman particularly interested in unnecessary effort. "I'm sure they'll turn up eventually," she added with complete confidence, as if detached Jeep doors routinely migrated home on their own like stray cats.

Harlan shook his head, running his fingers back through his wet hair with an exasperated sigh. He didn’t say anything at first, right hand grabbing onto the top of the Jeep as he lowered himself into the passenger seat. He buckled himself in then slouched a bit, long legs bent with his knees pressed against the dashboard. "I’ll tell Warren to put them back on. Last thing you need is to be driving around without any fucking doors when it starts snowing." His head rolled against the headrest, turning to look at her with a lazy sort of annoyance. "I refuse to nurse your sick ass on my couch because you drive around like this." He motioned his hand back and forth between the lack of doors.

Charlotte reversed down the driveway in a spray of gravel and fallen leaves, one hand hooked casually over the steering wheel while the other shifted gears with practiced ease. The Jeep rattled and groaned around them as it always did, old enough to have developed opinions about everything. Cold air streamed through the open sides, carrying the scent of pine, damp earth, and woodsmoke as she eased them onto the road.

"You still would, and you know it," she sighed, the words arriving with the exhausted certainty of someone who had known him far too long to be fooled by complaints. A small smile tugged at one corner of her mouth as she straightened the wheel. Harlan could grumble all he wanted. If she got sick, he'd be the first one shoving soup at her and pretending he wasn't worried.

The smile faded slightly after a moment. Charlotte shrugged one shoulder, eyes remaining on the road ahead as sunlight flickered between passing trees. "I didn't want to bother him," she admitted quietly. The confession sat awkwardly in the space between them for a second before she huffed softly through her nose. "Or you."

"Bullshit," Harlan muttered under his breath. There was no malice, just annoyed affection, because if she didn’t want to bother him she definitely wouldn’t have laid on her horn right outside his bedroom window, or accepted his help building her house, or asked for him to build her a pantry… and a dresser… and two nightstands. There was always a grocery list, but he never once complained, and in his own weird, hermit way, it was how he showed he cared.

Her fingers tightened briefly around the wheel before relaxing again. Warren already fixed enough things for her without being asked. Harlan had enough on his plate too. The cabin, the Jeep, the broken fence by the ranger station, the loose step on her porch. Sometimes asking for help felt too much like adding another stone to a pile someone else was already carrying. So she'd simply kept driving without the doors and told herself she'd get around to it eventually. She shot him a quick sidelong glance before looking back toward the road.

"Besides," she added, a little of her usual humor returning, "If I freeze to death, you can finally get all your flannels back."

"If you manage to freeze to death while possessing half of my flannels, then Charlotte McCoy—" His head turned dramatically to the left, looking right at her as they drove down the narrow, treelined road. "You are an idiot." Thick brows rose toward his damp hairline, silently daring her to argue, before his attention slowly drifted back toward the road and the forest that hugged in close on either side of the car.

"What are you doing before the festival?" Harlan asked, already trying to make time in his day to make her car whole again before flu season was in full swing. "I can see if Warren has time to spare. I know you store your doors in his garage anyway," he added with a faint guilty smile that said he knew her patterns, even when she tried to be spontaneous… She was just as predictable as he was.

Charlotte shook her head immediately, curls bouncing wildly in the wind rushing through the open sides of the Jeep. Sunlight flickered through the pines overhead, strobing across the dashboard while gravel crackled beneath the tires. Her fingers tapped lightly against the steering wheel, restless with thought as she mentally sorted through the long list waiting for her after breakfast.

"Pass," she said, the answer arriving without hesitation. "I'm headed to the store and then to hike." Her eyes stayed on the narrow road winding between towering pines, though she smiled faintly to herself. "A lot of the tourists coming in for the festival are sticking around for a couple weeks. I need to make sure all the trails are clear before they start wandering off into places they shouldn't."

The Jeep rounded a bend, revealing another stretch of forest draped in autumn color. Gold leaves flashed between dark evergreens while morning mist still lingered low among the underbrush. Charlotte hummed softly beneath her breath as she mapped routes and trail markers in her head, tracing familiar paths she'd walked often enough to know every fallen log and crooked switchback by memory alone.

"I've only got three trails left," she continued after a moment. "But the last one's a pain in the ass." One corner of her mouth curled upward as she glanced briefly toward him. "Honestly, it'll probably take me two days. I'm tempted to just camp out there and get it over with." The thought settled comfortably in her chest. A tent, a fire, the forest at night. There were worse ways to spend a weekend than sleeping beneath the pines she'd grown up beneath, though it always brought a form of nostalgia. The years spent camping with Warren, Harlan, and Savannah… she frowned slightly, and pushed the thoughts away. They could be analyzed when she was camping alone.

Harlan sighed, loud and definitely a bit dramatic, leaning forward to rest his elbows on his knees before burying his face into his palms. His fingers rubbed aggressively at his eyes as he grumbled her name into his hands. "Charlie..." he drawled. "You can’t camp out in the woods alone." He quickly held his hands up both surrendering and hushing her before she argued. "Yeah, I know. I know. You’re a big strong Park Ranger… but it isn’t safe." He looked over at her with a tired sort of resignation of a man who had this argument far too many times, and he’d keep having it until she listened. Mentally he was shifting things around to free up his night for an unplanned shift, because every time she didn’t listen he was still there, just out of sight making sure she was safe. "You’re gonna put me in an early grave," he muttered under his breath, closing his eyes as his head tipped back against the seat.

Charlotte let out a long sigh through her nose as she shifted gears, one hand loose on the steering wheel while the other rested against the gear lever. Pines gave way to scattered houses as they descended toward town, rooftops beginning to peek through the trees ahead. Morning sunlight spilled across the windshield in pale gold bands, warming one side of her face while cool autumn air curled through the Jeep's doorless frame. She shot Harlan an incredulous look that lasted a full two seconds before returning her attention to the road.

"Harlan," she groaned, drawing his name out like it physically pained her. "I'll be fine." One hand lifted briefly from the wheel so she could gesture vaguely toward the backpack sitting behind her seat. "I have bear mace, emergency supplies, a satellite phone, and enough first aid gear to survive my own terrible decisions." Her mouth twitched upward. "And I know you expect something to come eat me in the middle of the night, but I seriously doubt it's anything I can't handle. I am, as you put it, a big strong Park Ranger."

The Jeep rumbled toward the center of town and rolled to a stop at one of Pine Ridge's two traffic lights. Charlotte stared at the empty intersection ahead of them. No cars. No pedestrians. No reason whatsoever to be sitting there waiting. Her lips pursed thoughtfully as she drummed her fingers against the wheel and contemplated simply ignoring the light on principle.

Then a thought occurred to her. "You could always come with me."

Her head turned toward him, curls shifting across her shoulder as a smile slowly spread across her face. The expression carried the dangerous sort of innocence that usually preceded bad ideas. "If you're up for a two-day hike, sleeping in a tent, and eating canned beans and sausage for every meal." She wiggled her eyebrows at him. "Real luxury accommodations. Five stars. The raccoons usually keep to themselves."

The light finally changed. Charlotte immediately accelerated through the intersection with the enthusiasm of someone personally offended by stoplights. Her laughter drifted into the cool morning air as the diner came into view down the street, already busy with locals beginning their holiday. "Besides," she added, glancing sideways at him again, dimples appearing in her cheeks, "if you're so worried, that sounds like the perfect solution. You can spend two whole days supervising my poor decision-making in person."

Harlan tried to keep his facial expression somewhere in the realm of a concerned brother that just didn’t want his friend alone in the woods because of normal things… like bears. But then there were all the missing people, wolves with less self control, or vampires. Somehow Charlie managed to choose the career that sent her into the Black Hills alone, which gave him far more stress than he let on. She often wondered why he was always tired without knowing the lengths he went through to keep those woods moderately more safe for her… Which unfortunately kept her in her rose tinted bubble.

He sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. "Aside from the tent, that doesn’t sound far off from how I spend my days," Harlan commented wryly as the Jeep rolled to a stop in front of the diner. He groaned like a man far older than he was as she climbed out of the car. Boots crunched against dirt and pebbles that dusted the sidewalk as he pivoted, spinning back around. His hands gripped the rollbar over the absent door as he leaned over to look across the cabin toward Charlie. "As much as I’m sure you’d love the chance to make me miserable for two days straight, I can’t. Tomorrow’s Sunday."

For over a year, Harlan has been unavailable Sunday mornings. He woke up early, even when he wanted to sleep in, then went and picked up Mrs. Larson, driving her to her nine a.m. church service, followed by taking her grocery shopping. And after about the fourth consecutive Sunday she started making him lunch whenever they got back, insisting on feeding him since he refused to accept money or let her fill his tank. It was small really, and with how much Mrs. Larson told him he should be spending his weekend with a young lady, he highly doubted she’d mind. But as much as he tried to hide it behind his gruff exterior, he actually enjoyed those quiet Sunday mornings, the simplicity of helping someone who never asked for it. She didn’t have any children to look after her and Harlan didn’t have parents or grandparents to take care of. In its own unspoken way, they both filled little holes in each other’s lives without ever saying as much.

He had no intention of canceling, it just meant he was unlikely to get much sleep that night either. Maybe he could schedule a nap sometime before the festival… if he was lucky.

His fingers strummed against the cold metal of the Jeep, pursing his lips in frustrated thought. "You better check in on that damn satellite phone." Harlan’s eyes narrowed before he wagged a finger at her. "I’m serious, Charlie."

Something softened across Charlie's face. The teasing expression remained, but it settled into something warmer around the edges as she looked across the Jeep at him. Morning sunlight spilled across the diner parking lot and caught in the loose curls dancing around her face while cold autumn wind swept through the open cabin. The scent of coffee drifted from inside the diner every time the door opened, mingling with fallen leaves and the faint bite of approaching winter. Harlan's concern sat plainly between them, wrapped up in grumbling lectures and narrowed eyes, and Charlie had long since learned to recognize it for what it was.

"Tell Mrs. Larson I said hi." The words were gentle and sincere. Charlie shifted her hand atop the steering wheel and smiled despite herself, because Harlan was one of the best people she knew, even if he'd probably rather wrestle a bear than accept the compliment. He spent his Sundays driving an old woman to church, hauled groceries without complaint, fixed things that didn't belong to him, and somehow still found time to worry himself sick over everyone else. The thought made her chest feel strangely full for a moment before she shoved it aside in favor of something easier.

"I'll see you at the festival." Her grin returned immediately, bright and mischievous. "Do us both a favor and buy one of those little name-tag stickers. Write somebody else's name on it." She snorted and reached for the gearshift, already picturing the disaster waiting for him later that evening. "Otherwise Warren's gonna track you down and physically shove you into a vampire costume."

The image amused her enough that she laughed under her breath while throwing the Jeep into reverse. Gravel crunched beneath the tires. Wind rushed through the missing doors and tugged at her curls as she backed away from the diner. One hand lifted briefly from the wheel in a lazy farewell before she swung the Jeep toward the road, already thinking about trails, maps, and the miles of forest waiting for her beyond town… but first, she was going to stop at the store and stock Harlan’s kitchen with all of her, and his, favorite snacks.



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#315b70 ....|..... outfit ............... #fcb9c1 ....|..... outfit ............... their homes > municipal building


Sutton didn’t notice she had overslept until she rolled over in bed and the sunlight that poured between the blinds shined bright and golden into her eyes. She groaned and squinted, dragging her hand across her heavy eyelids to block out the light. For a second, she selfishly let herself think it was her day off, that she had stayed up too late or drifted off while watching a movie. But then the haze of reality crept in at the corners of her mind until she looked over at her nightstand where her phone illuminated showing her lock screen bursting with notifications. She gasped and sat bolt upright. Her hand shot out toward the small side table, knocking her phone, chapstick, and a handful of other things to the floor. She scrambled to the edge of her bed, leaning over the side of her mattress, half falling off, before scooping up her phone.

She didn’t bother moving, her lower half still on the bed while her left hand propped herself up. A knotted nest of blonde hair fell around her face, as she quickly unlocked her phone. Her thumb hastily navigated to her messages where several texts from Mayor Holt flooded her screen.

Mayor Holt . . .
.
Good morning. I would like a cappuccino today.
7:10 am

You did decent on the posters. You should also get yourself a coffee.
7:15 am

My vehicle needs an oil change. You need to take it to the garage before the festival. I don’t want anyone but Warren working on it.
7:25 am

Hello?
7:35 am

Hi. Hello. Will do. Be there ASAP.
8:07 am

...Sorry.
8:08 am


It wasn’t until she hit send on her response that she noticed her notifications were silenced, which explained… Well everything. "Damn it," Sutton cursed under her breath as she threw her comforter aside and jumped out of bed.

She moved through her apartment like a whirlwind, popping in and out of the shower in record time. Having no time to spare, she opted to leave her hair damp along her shoulders. Unfortunately that meant it’d be wild with frizz and curls by the time it dried, but it would have wasted an additional half an hour blowing it dry… and well, she didn’t want to see how angry the Mayor would be. Sutton scurried, hopped, and stumbled her way through gathering her things and getting dressed, stubbing her toes on more than one occasion. Surprisingly, she was gaining time, until she got to her damn tights. No amount of jumping or wiggling helped get them up any faster, and how she managed to accomplish it without getting a run, she’ll never know.

With her purse and satchel hanging off her left shoulder, and her heels dangling from her right hand, Sutton hurried out the door and down the stairs. She paused just long enough to slip on her shoes before bursting out the door along the side of Well’s Market. She couldn’t run in heels, or at least not well, which was probably for the best. Instead she charged down the sidewalk in a brisk walk, adjusting her bags every few steps, while constantly checking to make sure she had everything. There wasn’t really enough time to warrant slipping into the diner, but she needed coffee, and Mr. Perkins had come to expect it since it was a daily routine at this point.

The quiet bell dinged as the door swung open, followed by the sharp click of heels on old linoleum. Thankfully there was no line and Hazel had quickly learned to have her coffees hot and ready to go. Sutton shoved her phone into her purse, nearly missing the pocket twice, then scooped up the cardboard carrier in her right hand. "Morning, Hazel," she called to the girl with a warm smile. "Can you charge me double tomorrow? I overslept and Mayor Holt will kill me if I don’t get to his office like… Twenty minutes ago," she asked with an exhausted laugh and a desperate plea behind her eyes.

Hazel didn’t even hesitate. "Go," she said, waving her off before the other had finished the sentence. "We'll sort it tomorrow."

"Thank you! You’re an angel," Sutton called back to the waitress as she shuffled backwards, wiggling her shoulder to keep her bags from slipping down her arm. As she went to throw her hips back into the door, it swung open. The lack of resistance caught her off guard, but before she could tip over from her frantic hurry, Harlan Boone’s arm stretched out, hand splayed against the plane of her back to steady her.

"Easy there," he offered her patiently while hooking his foot around the door to keep it open. His hand remained firm against her back until she found her footing and took a second to catch her breath, nodding her head and blinking slowly. "If you’re already late, no point in hurting yourself to get there a little faster," he offered with a gentle pat to the shoulder.

She nodded her head slowly, finding reluctant wisdom in his words. But Harlan also didn’t know the Mayor, not like she did, and two minutes made a difference… to him anyway. The man took it upon himself to lift the straps of her bags up and over her head so they stopped threatening to slip off. She sighed at the small gesture of kindness, sparing a glance up toward him, guilt and exhaustion already tugging at her features when the day had hardly begun. "Thanks," she whispered, flashing him a tired, lopsided smile before she started back down the street.

It had only taken her a couple more minutes to reach the Municipal Building, but by the time she pushed through the entrance she was already over an hour late. Sutton stopped just past the threshold to catch her breath, blisters already forming along her feet where her heels rubbed, and wild blonde curls framing her face, frizzy and still half damp. From behind the Town Clerk’s desk, Jerry Perkins leaned forward, bald spot haloed by wiry white hair caught in the fluorescents. His smile came easily and warm, wrinkled and creased from decades of a life lived. He could have retired years ago, but he enjoyed his job far too much to stop now. His kindness was one of the few things that made coming to work every day worth it.

"Mornin’, Ms. Lockwood," he beamed brightly, waving an arthritic hand toward her in greeting. "You gave the Mayor and I a bit of a fright this morning."

Sutton’s head lulled to the side as she gave the older man a warm and apologetic smile. "I overslept," she explained as she crossed the quiet lobby, shoes thudding softly against the worn high traffic carpet. The building was old, one of the few structures that wasn’t swallowed by the mountain back in the eighties. It was freezing in the winter and sweltering in the summer, relying on fans and old radiators to help circulate air. The smell of mothballs, fresh xeroxed papers, and old books hung in the air, masked by the various autumn scented candles Mr. Perkins burned. That day seemed to be an apple pie kind of day.

Warped floorboards beneath the carpet creaked and moaned beneath every step as Sutton approached his desk. She set the drink carrier against the raised edge surrounding Mr. Perkin’s work area and started wiggling loose one of the coffees. "But don’t worry, I still have your coffee, just the way you like it." She smiled, holding out the cardboard cup toward him. Black, two sugars, and a splash of caramel.

The older man took the cup in both hands with a wide smile. "Sweet girl, you didn’t have to—" he tried to argue like he did every morning for nearly four years.

"Nonsense." She waved him off like she always did, smiling bright and unguarded as she took the carrier, and two remaining drinks, and headed toward the double doors opposite the entrance. "I always look after my work bestie, you know that," Sutton mused with a palpable effervescence.

She pushed open the large oak door with a smile, but the moment it latched shut behind her the corners of her mouth fell and whatever light that had lived behind her eyes vanished. The room was fairly gloomy with only two windows framed in sheer curtains that never saw proper sunlight. The walls were lined with tall wooden bookshelves and filing cabinets that shifted and creaked whenever she crossed the room. Then off to the side was a single desk that stood out like a sore thumb in the bleak dreariness of the Municipal Building. Everything on top of it was organized just the way she liked it. Her desktop calendar was covered in curly, practiced scribblings in various colorful inks denoting every meeting, engagement, and deadline. There were three pen cups holding an assortment of writing implements, a stack of pastel post-it notes, a crocheted daisy coaster, a water cooler in the corner decorated with garland like vines, a worn cardigan draped over the back of her chair, and a small space heater tucked beneath her desk. And everything, down to the empty clipboard that awaited the print out of her daily schedule, had pink on it… somewhere.

Sutton took a quick sip of her coffee before setting it down on the flower coaster. She pulled her bags from over her head and hung them from the dedicated hook on the wall behind her. She retrieved her phone and crossed the room to the water cooler. One hand began filling the cup while the other swiped furiously along the touch screen. Before the water had stopped flowing, the small printer beside her desk was already stirring to life, printing the day’s schedule which was over three pages long. She took the warm, freshly printed pages and pinned them to her clipboard, along with slipping a pen in the small space beneath the metal clip. Then her fingers curled beneath the handle to the top drawer of her desk. She pulled it open revealing a collection of personal items: a picture of her family hiking in the Black Hills when she was in grade school, a pink beanie baby Mr. Perkins gave her on her first day, lotion, chapstick… and an orange prescription bottle.

She exhaled deeply before picking up the bottle and popping the cap. The last two capsules of the iron supplement tumbled into her hand. Sutton looked down at them, rolling them around in her palm for a second, then tossed the empty orange container into the trash. Thoughts threatened to creep out from the recesses of her mind, dark and unwanted, but before they could take hold, she quickly tossed the pills into her mouth and swallowed them back with the water. The thoughts and pills vanished somewhere deep inside her, out of sight, out of mind. A problem for a different day… or lifetime.

Then, with no more time to waste, Sutton scooped up her phone and clipboard. She held them close to her chest with her left arm, while her right hand pickd up the Mayor’s steaming cappuccino—which she never really understood why he wanted it, but it was better to concede to his request rather than ask questions. She crossed the room toward a second, more ornate set of double doors, then paused. She drew in one last deep breath, before raising her hand that held the cup and rapped her knuckles against the wood.

Samuel Holt left his house every morning at precisely six o’clock. Not six-oh-one, not five-fifty-eight. Six. Routine had a rhythm to it, and he had spent more than two centuries learning that the world behaved better when people and places were pushed carefully into predictable patterns. The town still slept beneath a pale wash of morning blue as he drove through Pine Ridge, headlights sliding across old storefronts and dark windows while fog sat low between the trees at the edges of town. Porch lights glowed warmly against weathered houses, and in the distance he could already see old Mrs. Weller beginning her daily ritual of watering flowers she somehow kept alive even with the mountains steadily stealing sunlight from half her yard.

The recreation center sat quietly near the edge of town, looking more like an afterthought than an actual public building. The brick exterior had faded unevenly over the years while old white paint peeled around the window frames, and the sign out front still carried a hairline crack through the word Community from a baseball incident nearly eight years ago. Inside, the place was small enough that Samuel could take in the entire gym at a glance every morning. Two treadmills sat beside one another beneath mounted televisions perpetually tuned to local news channels nobody watched. A modest rack of weights lined one wall beside an aging bench press, while the stair climber in the corner remained little more than decorative furniture eleven months out of the year.

Beyond the back windows and glass doors sat the pool Samuel had paid for himself years ago, enclosed by chain-link fencing and newly poured concrete. It was little more than a large backyard pool by city standards, rectangular and simple with classic blue paint beneath the waterline, but for Pine Ridge it had become something treasured. During summer weekends children and teenagers packed the place until sunset while exhausted parents sat in plastic chairs beneath umbrellas and thanked Samuel for his generosity as if he’d personally parted the sea.

Howard sat behind the front desk exactly where he always sat, newspaper spread open before him with thick reading glasses balanced low on his nose. The old man looked up over the paper as Samuel stepped through the doors and immediately smiled. Deep lines folded around his eyes, warm and familiar with years of repetition. "Morning, Howard," Samuel greeted smoothly, already reaching into the inside pocket of his coat before the other man could speak. The folded fifty-dollar bill landed quietly inside the donation jar sitting beside the register with the same effortless motion Samuel had repeated every morning for years. Howard gave the same response he always did too, grumbling under his breath that Samuel would put him out of work, spoiling the place so much. Samuel smiled politely at the joke, because Howard liked it when he did.

Thirty-five minutes in the pool. Exactly thirty-five. Morning fog still curled lazily over the water when Samuel stepped through the glass doors leading outside, carrying the same quiet rhythm he carried through every part of his life. The concrete around the pool still held the chill of the night, dampness gathering in darker patches where dew had settled beneath wrought iron chairs and faded umbrellas. Pine trees stretched beyond the chain-link fence, their tops disappearing into drifting ribbons of mountain fog while the first hints of sunlight filtered weakly through the clouds overhead. The entire place sat suspended in that strange stillness before a town fully woke, caught somewhere between sleep and routine.

Samuel crossed toward one of the chairs nearest the pool and set to stripping for his swim. Movements smooth enough to seem absent-minded, though there was intention buried beneath every action. First came the charcoal gray sweatpants, folded neatly along the seams and laid carefully across the chair. Then his black t-shirt followed, sleeves tucked inward, smoothed once flat beneath his hand before being placed atop the others. Last came the lightweight windbreaker, dark navy with the Pine Ridge logo embroidered over the chest. He folded it twice and rested it on top of the pile, straightening one sleeve that had shifted slightly out of place. Even here, with nobody watching, order found its way into his hands.

Only once everything sat exactly where he wanted it did Samuel step toward the edge of the water. Cool air brushed against his skin while the surface of the pool reflected pale morning light in fractured ribbons beneath drifting fog. He rolled his shoulders once and stretched his neck slowly before leaning forward. Then he dove. The movement cut through the silence cleanly, smooth as a blade slipping beneath fabric. Water folded around him without resistance, cool pressure rolling across his skin while the world above vanished into muted sounds and shifting blue light.

Water rolled softly against the pool walls with every lap while birds slowly began filling the quiet with songs from the trees overhead. Samuel’s thoughts moved elsewhere while he swam; town budgets, council meetings, road repairs, names that needed remembering, faces that needed convincing. Afterward came the shower and then Sutton. Same time every morning. Same message structure. The same small exchange threaded quietly into the routine like clockwork beneath skin. Predictability had comfort buried deep inside it if one looked hard enough. Samuel would never admit that aloud.

By the time he stepped back outside, Pine Ridge had begun stretching itself awake around him. Main Street carried the slow movement of morning life now; Harv Sterling stood outside the diner, unlocking the doors while two teenagers laughed beside bicycles in the parking lot. Lucy Hale waved as she walked to the small book store to open up for the day, her son trailing behind her like a baby duckling, and somewhere down the street a little girl nearly tripped over her own feet trying to chase after a dog dressed in a ridiculous pumpkin costume. Samuel smiled and lifted his hand toward each greeting as he passed, every expression measured carefully enough to feel effortless. People smiled back warmly. Some called him the town's champion. Others swore Pine Ridge had never been better than it was beneath Samuel Holt. Morons, every last one of them. Still, they looked happy, and he supposed there were worse things people could be.

After returning home, Samuel moved through the rest of his morning with the same quiet precision that shaped every hour of his day. The shower ran hot enough to fill the bathroom with steam that curled against dark marble and mirrors. By the time he stepped back into his bedroom, he was already mentally sorting through the day ahead. Council reports. Budget approvals. Festival preparations. Missing persons concerns that had begun surfacing more frequently than he cared for. He dressed without hesitation, movements smooth and practiced after decades of repetition. Charcoal trousers, black button-down, tailored jacket. Sharp lines, clean fabric, polished shoes. The sort of outfit that suggested authority without ever appearing like it had tried too hard to achieve it.

He made a brief stop in town before heading toward the Municipal Building, stepping out a few minutes later with a basket of fresh muffins balanced easily beneath one arm. Pumpkin spice, cinnamon apple, blueberry, and chocolate chip. Margaret’s bakery was a small hole in the wall, but the woman insisted that holidays called for "Good moods and sugar!" and Samuel had long since learned it was easier to smile and indulge her than argue. Besides, people liked small gestures. People remembered them. His black Mercedes-Benz rolled quietly down Main Street afterward while Pine Ridge moved steadily into the morning around him, storefronts opening beneath hanging autumn decorations and paper ghosts swaying softly from lamp posts.

The Municipal Building sat near the center of town overlooking the square, old brick giving it more grandeur than Pine Ridge realistically needed. Samuel stepped through the front doors and exchanged greetings with Jerry Perkins as he passed.

His office sat at the far end of the upper floor, dark wood doors opening into a room that looked more suited for old money than local government. Rich mahogany paneling climbed the walls from floor to ceiling, broken only by built-in bookshelves lined with leather-bound volumes and carefully chosen pieces gathered over a lifetime most people would never comprehend. A chandelier hung overhead, scattering warm amber light across patterned rugs and black leather chairs positioned near a low table by the fireplace. Behind his desk, tall arched windows framed the distant mountains and forest while dark curtains pooled heavily at either side like shadows gathering along the walls. The entire room carried the smell of old books, cedar, and faint traces of expensive bourbon soaked into polished wood over time.

Samuel set the basket of muffins along one corner of the desk and lowered himself into the chair behind it with a quiet exhale. Papers disappeared beneath his hands as the morning settled into work, signatures sliding neatly along documents while his laptop cast a soft glow across dark wood. Time moved easily there. Predictably. He had almost finished reading through a report concerning the mine and new required permits when a timid knock tapped softly against the door. Samuel glanced briefly toward the clock sitting near the corner of his desk and found himself unsurprised. Sutton had overslept. He considered the fact for exactly two seconds before deciding to let it go. It was a holiday.

"Come in."

Sutton struggled to juggle everything she held, just for a second as she turned the handle. She regained her practiced hold of coffee in her right hand, clipboard and phone in her left as she stepped into the Mayor’s office and slowly closed the door behind her with a gentle bump of her hip. "I’m so sorry for my tardiness, sir," she apologized like she always did whenever she messed up, which was far more often than she’d like. She never met his gaze, keeping her eyes fixed somewhere always just below his line of sight. The quiet office was filled with the soft thud of her steps as she crossed the room toward his desk and set the cappuccino down on the same coaster he always had her place his drinks, drinking spout turned toward him just so.

Once it was settled, she took three steps back and brought her clipboard out before her, giving her something to focus on that wasn’t his harsh, scrutinizing gaze. "I slept through my alarms. I got here as fast as I could. It won’t happen again." As she spoke, Sutton’s hands curled tighter around the light pink clipboard until her knuckles went white, like she was bracing for reprimand, shouting, or whatever sort of punishment awaited her.

Samuel said nothing immediately. He simply reached for the coffee sitting neatly atop its coaster, fingers curling around the warm paper cup while his eyes remained on the paperwork spread before him. Steam rose in delicate ribbons between them, carrying cinnamon and espresso through the office as he lifted it closer and breathed in slowly. His shoulders eased by the smallest fraction, and a quiet sigh escaped him, soft enough it nearly disappeared beneath the distant hum of the building outside. He set the cup back down carefully without taking a drink, adjusting it half an inch until it sat precisely where he wanted it.

"That's fine," he said at last, voice smooth and brisk as his eyes lifted toward her. They lingered there for a moment, drifting over her posture and the clipboard clutched tightly against her chest before catching on the turtleneck wrapped around her throat. His mouth shifted faintly at one corner, barely enough movement to qualify as a frown before it vanished again. Good that the weather had finally begun turning colder. Summer had always complicated things more than he liked. People dressed differently when temperatures climbed, and inconvenience had a habit of becoming suspicion if one allowed it enough room to breathe.

Samuel leaned back slightly in his chair, one hand lifting in a dismissive motion through the space between them as if brushing the matter aside entirely. Work settled easier into his hands than sentiment ever had. People were simple when given roles, schedules, expectations. "Let's go over the agenda for the day." He folded his hands neatly together atop the desk and glanced toward her clipboard, expression settling back into its usual composed shape. Whatever thoughts had briefly crossed his mind disappeared beneath routine, filed away behind order and structure where they belonged.

Sutton nodded her head, and lifted the hand that still clutched her phone to sweep blonde waves back behind her ears that had started to coil a bit wild and untamed after air drying. She wet her lips and proceeded to list off his schedule like she did every morning. "Your next appointment is at…"

.....................................
9:45 am – 10:45 am
.

.
Safety walkthrough of the haunted house, mine tours, and ghost town tours

11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Check in with festival vendors and confirm booth locations

12:15 pm – 1:15 pm

Halloween lunch at the middle school

1:45 pm – 2:00 pm
.

Phone-in radio interview with PINE Radio, reminding residents about the Main Street closures and parking restrictions

2:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Annual spooky story reading at the elementary school

3:15 pm – 4:00 pm

Confirm contest categories and prizes

4:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Two and a half hour buffer for any last minute hiccups

6:30 pm

Meet at the Municipal Building and prepare for your entrance

6:55 pm

Procession into the festival

7:00 pm

Speech and ribbon cutting

8:50 pm

Announce children's costume contest winner

9:00 pm

End of family friendly portion of the festival

11:50 pm

Announce pumpkin pie and adult costume contest winners

12:00 am

End of the night firework show



"... After the fireworks the festival will conclude, and clean up will begin tomorrow morning." She flipped the last page clipped to her pink board to make sure she didn’t miss anything before clutching it against her chest. "As for your car," Sutton continued, trying to wiggle in the one last complication he dropped on her like he did most mornings. "I can drop you off at the mines for the safety walkthrough and it will hopefully be finished in time to get it back to you before your lunch at the middle school, or you can borrow my car—" The idea of Mayor Holt driving around in a pink Fiat was a funny image that she had to do her best not to think about too long before she accidentally laughed and made things far worse. "—You have the keys and it’s parked out back."

Sutton chewed on the inside of her cheek for a moment as she tried to think of any other options that were less humiliating or didn’t hinge on her nagging Warren Boone to rush an oil change on a very expensive car. "The weather is supposed to be fairly nice today, so you could also walk, or I can call around and find someone able to escort you around town." She lightly tapped her fingers against the side of the clipboard. "Mr. Perkins might also have a car you can borrow," she added, motioning back over her shoulder with a small jab of her thumb.

Samuel listened in silence while Sutton moved through the remainder of the schedule, fingers steepled neatly beneath his chin as the reality of the day settled heavier and heavier across his patience. Fireworks. Public appearances. Safety walkthroughs. A lunch at the middle school that would inevitably involve sticky fingers and children asking deeply unfortunate questions with complete sincerity. Next year he would simply cancel classes altogether and call it community morale. The schools could survive one free day in October, and more importantly, so could he. His mouth tightened faintly at the thought of another hour spent reading The Legend of Sleepy Hollow aloud to an audience of aggressively energetic four-year-olds.

Then Sutton offered him the Fiat.

Samuel’s expression shifted almost imperceptibly before smoothing itself back into place, though the response came perhaps a touch too quickly to qualify as casual. "Oh," he said briskly, already dismissing the possibility from his mind with the urgency of a man narrowly avoiding social execution. Clint would smell blood in the water instantly if he ever caught sight of Samuel climbing out of a pink Fiat in broad daylight. The humiliation would outlive civilizations. "That won’t be necessary. I can call a cab or—yes, Mr. Perkins." His agreement came unusually easy now, smooth enough that even Sutton might notice the suspicious enthusiasm behind it if she looked closely enough. Samuel leaned back slightly in his chair and lifted one hand in a vague gesture toward her clipboard, quickly trying to change the topic. "Make a note. Next year I'd like to give the schools a free day. Less..." He paused, visibly displeased by the concept alone. "Reading."

The word sat in the air with quiet disdain while Samuel pushed himself smoothly to his feet. His jacket shifted neatly into place as he rounded the desk, movements measured and controlled with the same effortless authority that made people instinctively straighten when he entered a room. Then his attention settled fully onto Sutton again. Not the clipboard this time. Not the schedule. Her. His eyes lingered along the faint shadows beneath her eyes, the tension she carried in her posture, the way her fingers still curled too tightly around the clipboard despite the conversation softening. Samuel tilted his head slightly, expression unreadable beneath the weight of his attention.

"Have you been sleeping enough?" he asked finally. The question came quieter than most things he said, though somehow that only made it more intense. "Taking your vitamins? A well balanced diet?" There was concern there, buried beneath the sharpness, though it surfaced in the same way everything did with Samuel; controlled too tightly, wrapped beneath scrutiny until kindness became something almost intimidating to receive.

Sutton nodded her head, blonde curls grazing her cheek as she pulled the pen from where it was clipped to the board and made a note the moment he mentioned it. Without looking up while her pen made an extra curl around the lowercase ‘g’, her head tilted slightly to the side. "Should I cancel the Christmas Eve ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas’ reading—" She paused when she heard the familiar creak of his leather office chair shifting to adjust to the absence of his weight. It was a sound that made her spine go rigid while the hairs on the back of her neck stood on end. It was an omen that rarely meant anything good, often followed by the lowering of her collar and the familiar pierce of fangs into her flesh. But she didn’t move, didn’t back down, holding her ground through the subtle tremors and the blanching of her knuckles.

His question pulled the air from her lungs in a startled gasp, and for the first time in days, if not weeks, her light brown eyes lifted to meet his gaze. "I—I…" Sutton stammered, not knowing what to make of his concern, even if it was delivered in what felt like more of an accusation rather than concern. She didn’t know how to answer because, truthfully, she hadn’t slept well since the first time he fed from her. Sleep eluded her and if it came, it was usually plagued with nightmares. Rather than answering, she skipped to his next question as seamlessly as she could manage. "I missed breakfast today, but I try to have three square meals, and I took my last iron supplements when I arrived this morning. I need to visit Dr. Hyde for a refill."

Samuel's frown deepened as she spoke. Not dramatically, just enough to pull faint lines into his brow while he watched her carefully over the edge of the clipboard. Missing breakfast was exactly the sort of answer he expected from her, which irritated him more than it should have. The startled look in her eyes lingered unpleasantly in the back of his mind as well. Sutton always looked like she was waiting for something bad to happen whenever he stepped too close. The realization settled heavily somewhere beneath his ribs, unwelcome and familiar all at once.

Without a word, he reached forward and tapped the edge of her clipboard with one finger. The motion was firm enough to redirect her attention without being aggressive, though there was still something undeniably commanding about it. "Stop and get something to eat when you take my car for the oil change," he instructed. "Something substantial. Not a granola bar. Not coffee." His gaze narrowed slightly as though daring her to argue the point. "You can eat while they're working on it."

Samuel let his hand fall away and straightened, attention drifting briefly toward the windows overlooking town before returning to her again. "I already have an appointment scheduled for you with Dr. Hyde, it was about time for you to run out, you should schedule appointments in advance in the future." The words came matter-of-factly, delivered with the quiet certainty of someone who had never considered asking permission first. He had simply handled it. That was easier. More efficient. People often complicated their own lives by insisting on choice.

Then his eyes slipped downward, catching on the high collar of the turtleneck wrapped around her throat. Something unpleasant twisted low in his stomach. Guilt was not an emotion Samuel entertained often, but every now and then it surfaced in small sharp fragments that refused to stay buried. He looked away first. A harsh breath left him through his nose before he turned and began making his way back toward the desk, jacket shifting softly with the movement. "Until then..." He paused briefly, jaw tightening. "I'll abstain." The words landed tersely, almost irritated with themselves. By the time he sat back down behind the desk, his attention had already returned to paperwork waiting in neat stacks before him, though the tension lingering around his shoulders suggested the conversation had settled somewhere deeper than either of them would likely acknowledge.

Sutton’s gaze fell automatically to her clipboard, and more specifically the Mayor’s finger as it tapped against the edge of the pink plastic in that silent and disarmingly soft way he demanded her attention. It was almost like gentle parenting, but there was no need to reinforce his words because she knew what he was capable of. She never attempted to defy him because her fear kept her obedient and complacent. Her blonde waves bounced softly as she nodded her head. "Yes sir, of course. That’s smart," she agreed, resorting to compliments whenever she was corrected or felt like she had misstepped because it was safe, because flattery was the only shield she had. "I might not have another chance to eat before the festival, and that’s unwise given my… condition." Pale, rose tinted lips pulled faintly at the corners in the closest thing that could be considered a smile in the oppressive presence of the Mayor.

There was a beat of silence, then her eyes widened, shocked that he had thought to make her an appointment or that he even bothered to be aware of her prescription schedule. For a fleeting moment, Sutton might have almost mistaken it for compassion or concern, but then the startling truth came crashing back down on her. She was more than his assistant… She was his only source of sustenance, as far as she was aware. It wasn’t about her well-being, but his. "Right, of course. Thank you, sir. I’ll schedule my next appointment when I’m in her office to avoid this in the future." She nodded her head again, blinking rapidly as she made a mental note.

Warm brown eyes tracked him as he circled back around his desk. His words landed heavy like a stone thrown in a still pond. She inhaled a soft, startled breath, watching him with evident disbelief furrowing her brows. "I—uh… Sir, are you sure?" The prospect of not feeling the sharp prick of his fangs in her neck or having to hide behind bandaids, turtlenecks, and scarves was a godsend, but Sutton also feared what hunger would do to him, or more importantly, his temper.

Samuel dismissed the concern with a small wave of his hand, as though the entire subject had already been decided and no longer required discussion. The gesture was casual. Final. His eyes drifted briefly toward the windows overlooking the town, sunlight filtering through old glass and spilling across the polished wood of his desk in pale rectangles. Hunger had never been particularly difficult to manage. Two centuries taught a man patience whether he wanted to learn it or not. "I'll be fine."

The words settled between them simply enough, though something heavier lingered beneath them. More often than not, Samuel regretted turning Sutton into his thrall. At the time it had been logical. Necessary. The sort of decision that fit neatly into columns of risk and reward. Yet the time afterward had complicated the mathematics. She remained stubbornly good despite everything, kind in ways that felt increasingly foreign to him, and every small act of thoughtfulness landed like an accusation he never asked for. He knew the arrangement was unfair. He knew she deserved better. Yet firing her felt impossible, and letting her go felt worse. So they remained trapped together inside a pattern neither seemed capable of breaking.

The guilt stirred briefly in the pit of his stomach before he shoved it aside with practiced efficiency. Samuel shifted back in his chair, posture straightening automatically as work reclaimed its place at the forefront of his thoughts. Order was easier than reflection. Paperwork was easier than conscience.

"I think you can be dismissed for now," he said, reaching for one of the waiting folders. "Handle whatever work needs doing, then take my car and get something to eat. Proper food, Sutton." His gaze lifted toward her pointedly over the edge of the file. "I'll see you later this afternoon."

He opened the folder and immediately frowned. A missing persons report stared back at him from the first page. Clare Ann. Twenty years old. The photograph clipped neatly inside showed a bright smile frozen permanently in time, the sort of picture families always chose because it felt hopeful. Samuel's eyes lingered there for a moment before shifting across the details beneath it. The muscles in his jaw tightened faintly. This wasn’t someone he’d orchestrated having gone missing like so many others. Then, almost as an afterthought, he glanced back up at Sutton. For a brief second his expression softened, something quieter passing behind his eyes before the familiar mask settled back into place.

Sutton blinked once and nodded her head. "Yes, sir. Of course." While holding her clipboard tight to her chest, she drifted across his office toward the far wall where he usually hung his coat. Her right hand dipped into the front pocket, retrieving his car keys like she had done countless times before. Muffled thuds followed her as she crossed the room toward the door. Her hand curled around the handle, turning it until she heard the latch click, then she paused. Her head lifted slowly, looking back over her shoulder toward him one last time. "Don’t forget a costume for the festival," she added quietly before exiting his office, vanishing out of sight, followed by the soft click of the door closing behind her.



interactions ....|.... hazel & harlan ............... mentions ....|.... clint ............... collabs ....|.... @Sleepy Tani
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Qia A Little Weasel

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#a04535 ....|..... outfit ............... #737e62 ....|..... outfit ............... harv's diner


The diner smelled like coffee and something cinnamon before Hazel had even gotten her coat off. She paused just inside the door, still holding the handle, taking stock of the space the way she always did in those first quiet minutes before the day truly began. The chairs were still up on most of the tables. The windows were dark in the early morning, the street outside reduced to the occasional blur of headlights passing slowly through. The coffee machine was running (Harv must have come in earlier than usual), and on the counter beside the register sat a small ceramic jack-o-lantern she was pretty certain had not been there yesterday, its painted smile slightly lopsided. Oh, Harv, she thought, with a small, reluctant smile.

She hung her coat on the hook by the back and tied her hair up with an elastic she kept around her wrist, pulling the dark strands into a quick ponytail. It was only when reaching for her apron on its usual peg that Hazel noticed the note. It was sitting on top of something orange.

Just for today. Halloween rules. – H

She lifted the note. Underneath it sat an apron that was orange, naturally, and printed across the front in large, friendly letters were the words WITCH BETTER HAVE MY COFFEE with a small cartoonish witch cat at the top.

Hazel looked at it for a long moment. Then she looked around the empty diner as though checking for witnesses. Then she put it on.

"Halloween rules," she said to nobody, donning the cute but somewhat silly thing. "Sure."

The next thing, and the first thing Hazel always did without thinking, was the coffee. She crossed to the machine to check the water level out of habit and adjusted the filter even though it didn't really need adjusting. The smell of it was already doing its work in the room, and she found that comforting in a way she hadn't expected when she'd first walked in here. Back then, she'd been three days out of Denver with two bags in the back of her car and a crick in her neck from sleeping in the front seat. She'd sat in the back booth with a cup of black coffee she didn't really want just to have something to hold onto. And the smell of fresh coffee in an ordinary diner had felt like the most normal thing she'd encountered in longer than she'd wanted to think about at the time. Like proof that normal mixed with some sense of peace still existed somewhere, even if she wasn't entirely part of it.

She wasn't sure she was entirely part of it yet now, either, if she was being honest. But the coffee still helped.

From there, it was the counter, which was quickly wiped down. The salt and pepper shakers came next before the sugar caddies, restocked from the box Harv usually kept under the register. Then there were the menus, wiped and stacked, though half the regulars didn't need them anymore and probably hadn't for years. Old Carl could recite the entire lunch specials board from memory. Dottie always ordered the same club sandwich, extra pickles, no tomato. But you never knew, you know? Tourists came through more often than the locals liked to admit, and around Halloween, the trickle was sure to become a steady stream, she figured.

The chairs came down next one at a time as Hazel continued to work her way around the room methodically, and as she set the last chair down at the table by the window, the one with the best view of Main Street, she straightened up and looked outside. The street was just beginning to consider being awake. Main Street had been blocked off to traffic, which gave the whole thing the quality of a stage being set with the townspeople moving through it with purpose, carrying things, arranging things, and occasionally arguing about where things should go. Hay bales and pumpkins were appearing in clusters along the storefronts, and farther down, she could see tables being unfolded and arranged, with someone directing the effort. An area near the far end of the street had been sectioned off with rope and stakes, empty for now with just the outline of something that would presumably make more sense later. A stage, maybe, or some kind of judging area from the looks of it. Finally, outside the library, a group of volunteers were hauling what appeared to be black fabric and plywood through the front doors, and there, closer than the rest, was Warren Boone. Hard to miss, really, at the best of times and particularly unmissable when he was in the middle of directing two other men in the positioning of a truck bed full of candy bags, pumpkins and who knew what else.

Hazel smiled despite herself. Halloween, where she came from, had been a much simpler proposition and consisted of a bowl of candy on the front table with not too much in it for the trick-or-treaters. She'd learned to buy a little extra on the side as well, tucked away in her bag and transferred to the kitchen cupboard when she got home from work. At the end of the night, when the door was done being answered, she'd slip this remainder into a bag and leave it outside on the step for any family that still had little ones out past nine who hadn't gotten enough yet. It had been a small thing. Hardly worth mentioning, but Hazel had looked forward to it every year anyway.

She turned away from the window and reached for the coffee pot, refilling her own mug from the batch she'd started twenty minutes ago. Maybe, she thought, I'll give out a little extra this year, too.
There was no one to account for anymore after all.

Eventually, the diner filled up gradually, then all at once. The first few customers came in ones and twos, the early regulars who wanted their coffee before the festival chaos properly descended on Main Street. Old Carl shuffled to his usual spot by the window, not even glancing at the menu. Dottie followed three minutes later, complaining about the slight chill in the air. A man in a Carhartt jacket sat at the counter and ordered just toast, nothing else, and ate it like he was late for something. Who knows. It didn’t really matter because Hazel moved through it all on autopilot the way she'd learned to in the weeks since she'd started, refilling drinks without being asked while remembering things like who took sugar and who didn't.

Outside the windows, the setup continued. More and more people appeared, carrying ladders and streamers and what looked like a six-foot-tall cardboard skeleton. The energy of it drifted through the glass in a way that made the diner feel slightly more alive than usual. A woman in a witch hat came in and ordered eggs over easy, the hat's brim bumping the doorframe on her way to a booth. Two men in matching flannel sat in the corner and talked about something involving the petting zoo. And by the time an older gentleman at the end of the counter was settling his bill with a handful of crumpled ones, the place had pretty much found its rhythm.

It was when Hazel was refilling the corner booth's coffee (third refill for the flannel men, both still on their first cup because they talked a lot more than they drank) that the bell above the door announced one Sutton Lockwood.

Hazel had Sutton's order ready before the woman had made it three steps through the door.

"Morning, Sutton," she said, sliding the carrier across the counter. The rest of their interaction happened pretty quickly after that, ending with Sutton’s request to charge her double tomorrow. Hazel waved her off before she'd finished the sentence. "Go," she said. "We'll sort it tomorrow."

The moment the words left her mouth, Hazel was already turning back toward the counter, reaching for the coffee pot out of habit. The bell chimed once behind her as the door swung open — or closed, she wasn't paying attention — and she stood there for a while with the counter rag in her hand, not really wiping anything and in her own head. She tried to imagine what it would be like working for someone like Mayor Holt. He'd been in twice since she'd started, and he'd tipped well both times. More than well, actually. So you know…he was nice enough from what she could tell, especially with organizing all of this Halloween stuff. The permits alone, along with the sheer number of people who apparently needed to be told where to put a hay bale, seemed like one bad headache after another. So, she didn't envy Sutton the logistics of it, however good the view from the mayor's office might be.

Unbeknownst to Hazel, Harlan lingered just outside the diner, door still propped with his left leg as he watched Sutton scurry off down the road with enough speed that she might be trying to reverse time itself so she could be on time. But last time he checked, humans couldn’t run eighty-eight miles an hour, especially not in shoes like those. His fingers strummed against the cool metal that framed the glass door, eyes narrowing as his brows furrowed. He couldn’t think of a single person in town who would be up in arms about their star employee oversleeping for once in their life, but he supposed if there was ever someone to be an ass about it…it’d be Samuel Holt.

It sat uneasily in Harlan’s chest in the same way undercooked chicken or too much alcohol lingered heavy and precarious in his stomach, where one quick movement could disturb the balance. There was something fearful in the girl’s eyes, like being late was more detrimental to her than just losing her job. He didn’t know how long the Lockwood girl had been working under the Mayor, but it was a while… long enough that he didn’t remember what it was like beforehand. Maybe he was looking for something where there was nothing to be found, or maybe he was overthinking. Both were possible. But the thought still nagged at the back of his mind, if only because he knew the Mayor, and the type of man he truly was… Something to bother Warren about later, if nothing else.

Harlan shook his head and went to enter a second time, but caught Corina Anders climbing out of her car after being dropped off by her husband. So instead he waited patiently, holding the door open for her as she climbed the steps and headed inside for her shift. She looked up at him with a warm smile, gently squeezing his upper arm as she drifted past. "Thank you, Harlan."

He nodded his head toward her once, sparing her a faint, lopsided smile that tugged upwards just on one side. Harlan gave her plenty of space before he stepped in after her, easing the door closed gently behind him. He weaved around an older gentleman paying at the cash register, giving him a firm pat to the shoulder as he passed. Then, at the far end of the counter, tucked away in the corner, forgotten and mostly out of sight, sat a white porcelain coffee mug waiting just for him. His calloused hands pressed against the edge of the counter as he swung his leg around the stool and slowly lowered himself to sit on the cracked leather seat.

He tested the temperature of the mug with the back of his fingers after noting the lack of steam curling from the dark liquid and sighed. Harlan waited patiently until Hazel didn’t seem busy, then he waved two fingers toward her to get her attention. "Hey, sorry…" He sighed, flashing her a sad attempt at a smile. "My brother stole my fucking truck and—" He shook his head, waving off the thought before he finished. "Can I get a fresh cup, please?"

Hazel had still been thinking about the kinds of pressures of small-town life when the draft from the open door finally stopped. It was Corina's hum of what might have been sarcastic concern that snapped her attention back to the present.

"Harv," Corina said, drawing the word out like it explained everything as she pointed at Hazel's apron. And it did, really. It explained all of it.

"Halloween rules," Hazel confirmed with a smile. It was probably the closest thing to a joke she'd made in company since arriving in Pine Ridge.

As if taking notice of this, Corina blinked once. Then she laughed and shook her head as she tied on her own plain white apron. The other woman seemed neither surprised nor disappointed by any of Harv’s antics, going on to say something about a commotion not far from here on her way past (apparently, there had been some kind of disagreement? Who knows). Either way, when Hazel turned, she found that table four needed refilling, and that the older gentleman at the register was having some difficulty with his card. And even by the time she had a moment, she had somehow acquired three more things that needed doing first.

It was somewhere in the middle of all of that that two fingers appeared at the edge of her peripheral vision, raised to get her attention.

Hazel was there in a moment to fulfill Harlan’s request, coffee pot in hand. The cold mug got set aside without comment, and a fresh one took its place. Steam rose immediately as she poured, dark and fragrant, filling the space between them.

"Don't apologize," she said simply, not looking at him yet. Her attention instead was on the pour, making sure to stop just shy of the rim of the mug. "The coffee was just early today." She set the coffee pot down and leaned against the counter across from him, arms crossed loosely, the witch cat on her apron sitting slightly askew. "Sounds like your brother's having a good time at least."

Harlan rested his left arm against the edge of the counter as he reached out with his other hand for the sugar shaker. He gave a small sprinkle to the steaming black liquid in front of him before sparing a glance over his shoulder and out the diner window where he saw the top of his truck glint in the sunlight. And beside it, stood a tall, broad-shouldered man with the telltale nappy hair that could only belong to Warren. Harlan scoffed and slid the glass sugar container back to where it belonged next to the napkin dispenser. "Yeah, well…" He lifted his spoon and slipped it into his coffee, metal softly clinking against porcelain as he stirred. "Warren could have fun in a blackout. He’s easily amused." While his words were delivered dry and annoyed, there was still a warm fondness behind the way the corner of his mouth curled into a faint smile that said he could talk shit because Warren was his brother, but no one else could.

"Sounds exhausting, but at least someone is, I guess." Hazel replied. She straightened up and retrieved the coffee pot, more out of habit than need, and cast another glance out the window at the top of the truck catching the morning light. "So what's the plan for you today then?" she asked, nodding toward the window. "Besides getting your truck stolen for the greater good."

His shoulders lifted in a single shrug. "I don’t have work… Probably means I’ll get roped into helping someone set up." While Harlan might have sounded annoyed or indifferent, in reality, he didn’t mind all that much. Even if they didn’t ask for his help, the moment he saw someone struggling with a booth or a heavy crate, he’d be there… Like he always was.

"Mmhm, sounds about right for a day like today," Hazel said before casting a glance at the room to take a quick stock of her clientele. The woman in the witch hat was still working through her eggs, her attention fixed on something outside the window. Old Carl had fallen asleep on his stool, chin tucked into his chest, his empty coffee cup still within reach. Dottie was reading a paperback with a cover so creased it might have been older than Hazel if not Dottie herself. Normal. Ordinary. A diner full of people who belonged here in ways she was still trying to find for herself.

"It's going to be one of those strange mornings for the both of us, I think."

"Whole town’s acting weird," he commented plainly as he lifted the spoon from his mug, licked it off, and set it aside on his napkin. "Halloween’s usually trick-or-treating and a little more traffic to the Apothecary. Nothing like this." Harlan slipped two fingers through the handle of the mug, lifted it in a general gesture toward the town beyond the diner, before bringing it to his lips and taking a small sip. He shrugged his shoulders, not really understanding why they were going through all the effort. Pine Ridge was better without obnoxious tourists traipsing about the place. Festivals weren’t terrible; he just wasn’t overly fond of the pretense behind them.

The Apothecary. Hazel had been in once, just to look around. She'd bought a small amethyst from the woman who ran it, too. Something about a calming effect, which had seemed optimistic at the time and still did, if she was being honest. It was in her apron pocket right now, sitting beside her order pad and a spare pen. She’d almost thrown it out a dozen times, but she hadn’t. Might as well use what she could, right?

"Can't say I don't get it," Hazel said, which was as close to agreeing with someone about tourists as she was willing to go, given that she was, technically, one of them. "But I'll admit I'm a little curious to see what this place has to offer. First Halloween here and all. So… looking forward to it… a little?" The last word came out higher than she'd intended, teetering into question territory. Just agree with him, her old reflex whispered. Tell him you hate festivals too. Make him comfortable.

But she didn't hate festivals. She couldn’t know that yet. And something about starting all over again in this town made Hazel want to be honest, even if honesty felt clumsy and foreign.

Still…

"Sorry…" she added, almost automatically, forcing herself not to look away and at least being successful there. "Back where I'm from… Halloween’s a small thing, too. Bowl of candy, porch light on sort of thing. People are actually… excited here? About something. And it’s just, uhh… kinda nice… I guess?"

Harlan had leaned forward, knees spread so they didn’t press uncomfortably into the side of the counter as he rested his forearms against the short overhang. His calloused and work-worn hands wrapped around the mug, thumb brushing the brim of the porcelain. "Why are you apologizing?" he asked, looking at her from beneath his prominent brow and the dampness that still clung to his unkempt hair. His gaze drifted back over toward the window, out to his brother directing and laughing, to the unreasonable number of pumpkins, and to the prospect of their small town finding a reason to celebrate.

"I get it. I don’t mind new traditions," he offered, looking back up at Hazel for a moment before taking another drink of his coffee. "I just like Pine Ridge the way it is… small and remote." Harlan shrugged, rocking his head from right to left with a weak, lopsided smile. "There’s a difference between the occasional new face passing through and deciding to stay versus actively seeking tourism."

A few seats further down the counter, Carl had snored loud enough to startle himself awake and catch the tail end of their conversation. "That’s just ‘cause you’re grumpy and antisocial," he offered with a wheezy laugh and a toothy smile that made his eyes squint until they were nearly closed.

Harlan snorted into the mug as he went to take a drink. "Who asked you, old man?" he replied, and though his tone was flat and dry, fondness still sparked behind his eyes and in the subtle creasing of his faint crow’s feet.

Carl laughed himself into a small coughing fit, but his grin never shone brighter as he clutched his chest with one hand while wagging a finger at Harlan with the other. "I don't gotta be asked. I'm a damn volunteer, boy," he managed between hacks before he dissolved into another round of coughing that made Dottie look up from her paperback with a long-suffering sigh.

Meanwhile, Hazel watched the whole interaction and felt something loosen in her chest that she hadn't realized was tight. It was a strange thing to see, these two men, separated by decades, insulting each other with the ease of people who belonged to each other. Not by blood, maybe, but by time.

She’d never had that, at least not in a way that had lasted.

She'd had friends once, good ones she thought. People who would remember her birthday and call her at random times just to check in. But somewhere along the way, the calls got less frequent, and the plans kept falling through. And she'd told herself it was just life, just everyone getting busy, just the natural way things thinned out when you got older. It was easier than examining why, specifically, her world had gotten so small without her noticing until it already was.

"Habit," she said then, answering Harlan’s earlier question at last. It was insufficient and too honest all at once, and yet it was also the truest answer she was willing to give. True enough that it sat heavy on her tongue, and Hazel had to look away when she said it. With the coffee pot, she moved to refill Carl's mug without being asked, mostly to give herself somewhere to look.

"So, it sounds like you're not a big fan of change," she said after a while, which came out slightly more pointed than Hazel had intended. She softened it quickly with a small shrug. "Not that there’s anything wrong with that."

Harlan shrugged, his gaze falling to the last remnants of black liquid that rested at the bottom of his mug. His thumb tapped against the porcelain handle. "Not really," he replied simply, without any explanation, before lifting his coffee and drinking what remained. There was a time when he didn’t mind the world changing around him. Hell, there were parts of it he actively sought to change and looked forward to. But once the carpet was pulled out from under him, he found it difficult to look at things the same way. Routine became the foundation for his life. Things were better, easier when they were predictable, and it was that predictability that kept him in one piece. He couldn’t afford to fall apart a second time.

He set the empty mug back down with a deep sigh that was the closest glimpse anyone ever got to what he was actually thinking. His arms crossed loosely, forearms pressed to the edge of the counter as he looked back over toward Carl, then out the diner window. A faint smile tugged at the corner of his mouth as he watched his brother laugh and joke with others in passing. An ache that always lived dormant in his chest constricted a little tighter at the sight. Harlan could hardly remember being like that anymore. It was like a fever dream where he could no longer tell what was real or a fantasy. He used to laugh once, smile once.

His only saving grace was that eventually people just stopped asking. He didn’t know if it was Warren’s doing. He didn’t care. He knew what was said after he left a room, the whispers they shared about the Boone brothers and how their names were on everyone’s tongue when they were young, and the pity that always followed whenever Harlan was mentioned. It had been eighteen years and it never changed; their sympathy just grew heavier and harder to ignore. But… at least they stopped asking.

She watched him set the empty mug down, the sigh that followed seeming more like something that had been sitting in his chest and had found its way out, whether he intended it to or not. His gaze drifted to Carl, then out the window to where Warren was. Something moved across Harlan's face at the sight of his brother. Something that came and went so quickly that Hazel almost missed it. Almost. But she had spent enough years watching faces for information that other people didn't intend to give directly. That was the thing about living with a person whose moods seemed to shift like sudden bad weather: you learned to read the sky before the rain ever started and hoped whatever you did would allow you to survive the eventual downpour.

Even so, in the end, Hazel still chose to look away before he could catch her looking.

A moment or two passed before Harlan sighed and pushed off the counter. He stood up slowly, leg swinging around the stool as his hand dipped into his back pocket. After fishing out the old, worn leather wallet, he flipped it open and grabbed a twenty-dollar bill. His coffee wasn’t more than five bucks, but he didn’t give it much thought. Perhaps because it was a holiday, or maybe because Hazel didn’t ask, he felt a little more generous than normal. He set the bill on the counter and slid it toward her. "Happy Halloween. Hope the festival doesn’t disappoint."

Hazel looked at the twenty, then at him. Her instinct was to say that, while it was no 100 dollar bill, it was still too much. But she caught herself. "Oh, yeah, thanks a lot. And you too."

He lightly rapped his knuckles against the counter twice, offered the best smile he could—which was little more than a tug at the corner of his mouth—then made his way toward the exit. As he passed Carl, he gave the man a soft pat and a squeeze to the shoulder before slipping out the door with the soft chime of the bell.

Hazel watched Harlan go through the window, the diner already feeling quieter without him even though it was still half-full. A family of four had settled into a booth near the back, the youngest drawing on a placemat with a red crayon, tongue poking out in concentration, and the woman in the witch hat had finally finished her eggs. Normal sounds. Normal patterns of daily life here. But the absence of Harlan’s stillness was somehow bigger than his presence had been. Sure, his brother took up way more physically and possibly emotionally, but there was something solid and fixed about Harlan Boone that added to his perceived reliability, she supposed. The young woman felt a small, unwelcome pull of envy at that, followed almost immediately by guilt for feeling it. She didn’t know about his life. Didn’t know him, really, beyond the surface details of his calloused hands and the fact that people in the diner seemed to appreciate him. Carl clearly did.

But she envied it anyway. The having of a self so established that change felt like something to be defended against rather than fled toward. She had spent the last however many days becoming someone new in a town that didn’t know the difference, and every morning she put on the uniform, the apron, and the name ‘Hazel’ like a costume, waiting to see if it would fit any better than it had the day before. It hasn’t quite happened yet, but perhaps one day it will.

The twenty-dollar bill sat on the counter. Hazel picked it up and tucked it into her apron pocket. Then, she wiped down the stretch of counter near Carl without particular purpose and, after a moment, spoke what was really on her mind: "You seem to know Mr. Boone pretty well."

Carl wheezed into his coffee mug clutched between hands worn by life and years of manual labor. His grin pulled wide, creasing the wrinkles along his face with amusement. "Mr. Boone?" he mused as he set down his half-drunk cup with a soft clink. "He’s been gone ‘bout twenty years now." His hand raised, grabbing the bill of his old stained baseball hat, lifting it so he could scratch at his patchy white hair. "Used to work with Wyatt Boone. Known those boys their whole life."

Dottie looked up from her weathered paperback, readers barely hanging onto the tip of her nose. Her smile was gentle, with warm eyes, and wispy gray hair that framed her face. "Harlan? Oh, he might not talk much, but he’s a sweet boy," she beamed like a grandmother proud of every young face that wandered into the diner—younger than her anyway.

Hazel smiled at that. Harlan was probably pushing forty, but to Dottie, anyone under seventy was apparently still a kid.

Then Dottie sighed softly, like a sudden memory had stolen her light. Her head shook softly as she lifted back up her book and flipped the page. The older woman’s gaze lifted a short while after, looking over the top of her glasses toward Hazel. "It’s just sad," she lamented.

Hazel glanced over at her. "What is?"

"Dottie," Carl drawled, turning slightly on his stool so his left arm rested against the counter as he looked back at the woman. "You know better than to gossip, y’old busy body."

Dottie scoffed, letting her hand fall to the table with a soft thud, book still held loosely in her fingers. "It’s not gossip when everyone knows… Like that sciatica of yours that you keep trying to hide."

Carl’s face reddened and contorted before he wagged a finger at her. "This is why you’re alone, woman."

Without sparing him a glance, Dottie lifted back up her book, entirely unbothered like this was something that happened every other day, and was just part of the town’s charm. "Should I cancel backgammon then?" Carl just huffed and spun back around, taking a sip of his coffee because he had no response… and no, he didn’t want to cancel backgammon.

Hazel watched the two of them with an expression she was fairly certain gave her away entirely. She pressed her lips together and looked down at the counter, only looking back up when she felt ready to.

"So," she said, directing this carefully at Dottie rather than Carl, "what is it that everyone knows?"

Dottie looked up, resting her book on the table in front of her, then pushed her glasses farther up the bridge of her nose. "Girls have been sweet on those Boone boys since they were in high school. For as long as anyone can remember, Harlan was dating the eldest McCoy girl. Oh, what was her name?" She muttered under her breath and snapped her fingers, trying to remember the girl’s name before waving it off dismissively. It wasn’t important. "That was back when he was a lot more like his brother," Dottie added with a sad smile that said if she thought hard enough, she could almost remember it.

Hazel blinked, picturing Warren out the window, who was booming and alive in every visible way. Then, she tried to overlay that image onto the man who had just left. It didn't quite fit. At least not anymore.

"Sometime after Harlan graduated,” Dottie continued, "their daddy passed and—Oh, I don’t know—three or so months later that McCoy girl skipped town." There was a heavy silence that settled between them for a moment. Carl’s attention fell to his coffee, focusing on drinking what remained rather than meeting anyone’s gaze, while Dottie’s frail hands scooped back up her book and folded the cover back to keep her hands busy. "People speculate, but no one knows why…"

"Heard he was fixin’ to propose," Carl added as he set his mug back down and gently pushed it away.

Dottie rolled her eyes and shook her head. "People don’t just leave in the middle of the night because of marriage proposals, Carl."

"Ah, hell. I don’t know." Carl threw up his hands exasperated. "I’m just saying’ what I heard."

"At any rate," Dottie continued, redirecting the conversation back on track. Because while she might feed the gossip mill, she didn’t put stock in hypotheticals or theories. She only shared what she knew to be fact and left the why’s and what for’s for everyone else to ponder or worry over. "He’s never quite been the same."

"Well, can you blame him?" Carl added, leaning to the side as he tried to fish out his wallet with a frustrated grunt. "Best thing that girl can do now is stay away. I don’t think anyone is keen on seeing her again… her sister included," he concluded as he pulled out a twenty to settle his bill along with a generous tip.

Hazel was quiet as she listened along, keeping herself moving and busy with different tasks. She returned the coffee pot to its warmer, the handle clicking into place. She adjusted the napkin dispenser by an eighth of an inch. She straightened the sugar caddies even though they were already straight. Standing still just felt like it would give too much away. She had asked a simple question, and yet the answer had unfolded like a map of a country with a rich history she hadn't known existed.

A girl who left in the middle of the night. Just gone. No explanation offered. No goodbye left behind for the people who loved her. A father in the ground—passed, Dottie had said, such a soft word for something that clearly hadn't been. And Harlan Boone spending the better part of his adult years becoming smaller than whoever he'd been before, building his whole life around the kind of predictability that couldn't leave without warning.

Hazel thought about the fact that he always sat at the same stool if he could and ordered the same coffee, black with extra sugar that was completely optional. She had labelled all of that as the comfortable predictability of a regular, the kind she'd come to rely on in her weeks at the diner. But she understood it differently now. It wasn't just a habit. It was someone who had learned the very hard way that the things you built your life around could disappear overnight and had decided, consciously or not, that the only defence against that was to need as little as possible that was different from the usual.

Hazel wiped the same stretch of counter twice without noticing, the rag moving in slow arcs. It had long since lost any trace of a spill, but her hand kept going as if the motion itself might scrub away the thoughts that had settled into her chest.

Best thing that girl can do now is stay away.

Her hand paused on the counter.

She thought about Denver. About the life she'd left behind without a word. About the people who probably still speculated about that and told stories over coffee in some other diner somewhere.

Soleil Villanueva? Oh, she just up and left one day. No one knows why.

She wondered if anyone there had said, ‘best thing she can do is stay away.’

She wondered if they were right.

"So no one really knows why, huh?" Hazel asked, the question coming out softer than she intended. She didn't look at Dottie or Carl. Instead, she looked at her hands on the counter, the rag still paused in its movement. "Why she left, I mean. If… maybe… maybe she had good reason to?" She could feel Dottie's gaze on her, gentle but curious. Carl's too, though his was a little heavier.

"Oh, some people know," Carl spoke through a tired grunt as he pushed off the counter and got to his feet, quiet pops radiating from his old joints. "But good luck getting Charlie or the Boones to talk about it." He grabbed his coat from where it lay across the stool beside him and started pulling it on, one sleeve at a time.

Hazel watched him pull his coat on, sleeve by sleeve, the pops of his joints punctuating each small victory over age. "Fair enough," she said, which was as close to ‘I understand’ as she was willing to get out loud. She didn't push further either. She had already said more than she meant to, even if neither Carl nor Dottie knew that.

She picked up Carl’s mug and his twenty without making a production of it. "I'll get you your change."

Carl waved a hand, already halfway to the door. "Keep it. You earned it putting up with us old folk." His hand found the door handle without looking, and the bell chimed as he stepped out into the morning. Through the window, she saw him pause on the sidewalk and squint up at the sky, checking the weather, maybe, or just giving his eyes a moment to adjust. Then he turned in the direction of his next destination, hands in his coat pockets, his gait slow but certain.

Hazel set the empty mug in the wash bin beneath the counter and folded the twenty into her apron pocket next to the amethyst and her dwindling order pad.

"It's a kind thing," Dottie said then, her voice soft and measured. Hazel turned to look at her. The older woman had closed her book again, one hand resting on the cover, her thumb running lightly along the edge of the pages. The smile on her face seemed just as gentle as she was. "Giving people the benefit of the doubt. Most don't even bother." She paused, her thumb still moving along the page without turning it. Her eyes were on Hazel now, warm but searching.

"Though I'll say this much. Harlan’s a good man. Always has been."

Then she turned the page and went back to her book.



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_____________________________________________Martinsville, Virginia
1836

└──────────────────────────────────









The smoke stack had been visible for some time, streaking across the late evening sky as an ominous sign that something terrible had happened. The direction and the distance indicated Beaver Creek, a plantation he owned. A plantation in his family’s name for nearly 60 years and the second his family had built in the state. There was money in those twisting black clouds, evaporating quickly. Bleeding him and his family like someone had nicked a vein. And although the blood didn’t run red, that color emptying into the sky was the unmistakable mark of their most profitable commodity.

A puff of smoke poured from his lips, and drifted lazily across the dirt stained window, obscuring his view of the plume. Obscuring his view of his reflection hanging over it. His gray eyes were the only thing visible to him, dressed in brimstone, returning his stare like they belonged to someone else. To something else. A demon, beckoning him to approach and save that which was his. It felt like a sign.

It felt a lot like punishment.

Movement in the corner of his eyes drew his attention away. From up the road, three men came into view with a fourth strung between two of them. They were signaling as they dragged the man through the dirt, throwing their voices across the field at somebody else out of view. Eventually, one of the men broke away from the others and began sprinting toward the manor.

He turned. ”Andy?!...” He yelled, snuffing the cigarette in his hand before stepping through a pair of nearby doors and onto the landing at the top of a flight of stairs. Below him, the main entrance had already been opened and a boy, in his late teens was standing there, peering out at something approaching with an intensity that read as both worry and excitement. ”Andy! What in the god’s damn is that commotion out there?!”

”Sir Hairston! Apologies!” The boy straightened, startled “Men are coming up the road. They’re calling for you, sir.” The boy replied, stepping back and onto the porch as if he were already in the man’s way.

The shouts were clearer now, less a muffled tune and more the vague shape of words that could almost be understood accompanied by the uneven approach of boots on loose gravel. He descended as they grew louder, getting to the bottom of the steps just as a man appeared in the doorway. George as he was known. A scrawny overseer who looked about as presentable on any day as he did now: Disheveled short brown hair. Out of breath and sweating profusely into an already well stained shirt that clung to him like a second skin. He’d tracked dust and dirt across tiles as he took another few steps inside and then propped himself up on his rifle.

”The hell is it, George?”

”Sir Hairston, sir... a driver,” the man said breathlessly. ”Found him hiding in the brush, ‘tween here and Beaver Creek. Says he was there. Says he knows what happened.”

”Coming up the road now?”

George nodded. ”Yessur,” And moved out of the way as the Planter stepped through the foyer and out the front doors into a quickly approaching dusk. Outside was more humid. The air stuck to his face smearing the last heat of the day across it. He could feel the beads of sweat on his skin but there was no cool kiss of the wind. Just smothering warmth and a stench in the air like ash. Above him, the sky burned in brilliant colors cast from the distant horizon by a setting sun. Its dying light stained his fields and the white wood walls of his manor in hues of red-orange encroached by violet shadows.

From his breast pocket he pulled out another cigarette and a match from a matchbox and had both lit and pressed against each other by the time the approaching men were halfway up his driveway. The yellow glow burned bright in the shadow cast by his downturned face, illuminating Hairston for the two men and the third strung between them as he stood waiting at the end of the path. He watched them too intently, a thousand questions apparent in the intense grey of his eyes made more intense by the match flame reflected within them. Whole conversations had with himself as they crossed the last few feet to him to present the driver they captured.

Hairston snuffed the match with a wave, flicked it into the dirt and pulled on his cigarette, burning nearly a quarter of it before blowing the smoke through stained teeth. He pointed at a spot on the ground and where the two men promptly dumped the third, putting his face in the dirt.

The driver looked as if he'd been dragged through the brush he was found in rather than merely found in it. The man's shirt was torn and stained in streaks of mud and dirt and his trousers were barely holding to his waist. And although rather difficult to see now, Hairston had noticed on the man's approach that his face had been cut up and his left eye swollen shut.

”Get him up.” He said quickly to the two standing on either side of him. They grabbed him by his arms and hoisted him to his knees. From his good eye, the driver looked up at Hairston.

”Where you running to huh? I own every acre from here to the horizon ain't nowhere you can run.”

”I wasn't... sir.”

"No?"

"No, sir. I was comin' to tell yuh what happened." The man on his knees gestured behind him in the direction of the smoke stack still visible in the fading light.

Hairston pulled on his cigarette and blew the smoke into the air, taking a moment to study the plume again. "Beaver Creek." He turned back to the driver. "You are a driver there?"

”Yessur.”

”Well then, get on with it.”

”It was a man.”

There was another pause, this one suspended in the air by all men present. A silent acknowledgement and quiet disbelief. Hairston chewed his tongue for a moment, glanced at the other two men who simply returned his, and then took another pull from his cigarette, lowering himself to the ground as he inhaled until he was level with the driver. He smiled something vile as he let the burnt air in his lungs escape as curling tendrils of smoke that wrapped around stained teeth and drifted through his beard.

"You're telling me a single man burned down my plantation."

”Yessur.”

”Are you lying to me? Cause if you lying, I’ll have George over there shoot you from where he's standing on that there porch, you understand?”

The man shook his head. ”I ain’t no liar, Mr Hairston. It was one man. A-..." There was a bit of hesitation, but eventually he resolved to finish the sentence. "...A white man.”

"A. White. Man..." Hairston repeated slowly, not believing him. His trust was already hanging by a thread, but there was a curiosity to it he couldn't deny. Some small desire to see where this tale led. "Alright. One of mine?"

Another head shake. "No sir... he was in the field... workin' it."

This time it was Hairston who shook his head. ”No. I don't have anybody done recently got here working for me. No contracts."

"I swear..."

"You know what this man look like?” To which the driver only nodded. There was another pause, this one shorter, followed by a finger snap and wave at Andy, who had been standing on the porch next to George. ”Andy!”

The boy jumped down from the porch and ran up to the group of men.

”Andy, get your ass down to the Williams and fetch their son.” The boy nodded and immediately took off down the driveway. ”And not the dumb one! The artist!”









Martinsville, Virginia
1836
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
2026
Pine Ridge, South Dakota












#bca346 ....|..... outfit .....|..... Main Street

Noah put the car in park and shut the engine off, letting the growl of the engine die and the still eerily quiet that was Pine Ridge proper find him again. It was difficult adjusting to the speed of sound in a small town, especially built into the base of a mountain as it was. There was no comfort in noise and no warmth from an ever present sun. Just the cold embrace of an ice wind as it tumbled down the peak and rolled over the town nestled in its shadow. Walls kept Noah’s thoughts from tumbling out of his head and there were no walls here. His thoughts kept getting away from him, running toward the mountain and flitting into the trees, carrying with it ideas of ‘what’ and ‘where’.

Right now, the ‘where’ was Main Street and the ‘what’ was the Sheriff he was hoping to find through the doors of the Sheriff’s station.

Noah retrieved a thin binder from the passenger seat and stepped out into the biting cold of an early morning. Clouds stuck to the sky and obscured the nearby mountain peak and cast everything in a drab shade of gray, but the air, as ever, was crisp. It filled his lungs with ice that shocked the lethargy from his eyes and then tumbled free from his lips as a rolling ball of hot air.

He flipped his wrist and checked the time.

7:00



#bca346 ....|..... outfit ............... #00aeef ....|..... outfit ............... Sheriff's Station

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Noah entered the station, exchanging the biting cold with the comfort of working heat and the smell of old carpet and worn leather.
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A small bell jangled as the door swung in, revealing wood-panelled walls illuminated by fluorescent tubes in the ceiling.The lobby wasn’t particularly spacious and revealed much of what the sheriff’s station had to offer. An empty check-in counter, wood-carved and still-gleaming from a recent polish, stood in wait with an old bench to the right. A small, unsecured gate that came up waist high blocked anyone from wandering further into the space. Another desk sat a few paces behind the check-in counter, with an old oak door and window leading into an office. It was ajar, a singular yellow lamp glowing. The shades were drawn closed, obscuring the figure shuffling papers on their desk inside. To the left, past the gate, stood a couple holding cells made of brick and tarnished metal bars. Signs indicated that down the hallway past the cells were evidence lockers and the morgue.

It took a moment before the sound of wood scraping against wood came from the office, and a tall man in a tan uniform stepped out into the doorway. The bags under his eyes betrayed weeks of late nights and early mornings, if not months. He sniffed a little as he took in the man before him, a look of momentary confusion crossing across his face. A stranger in town, showing up this early in the morning, was never a good sign. Sheriff Dev Sarkar smoothed his shirt, as he took a few steps closer, letting a polite smile tug at his lips. ”Good morning,” he offered, crossing over towards the gate. ”What can I do for ya?”
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Noah returned a greeting nod and a smile, studying the man on approach and deciding with little reason that this was the man he needed to talk to. There was hardly anyone else in the station. “Good morning,” he began, offering his hand for a brief handshake across the divider. “Apologies, I know it’s early and I know you haven’t seen my face before. You’re probably a little confused but I promise I’m not here to waste anyone’s time. I’ll get right to the point. I’m uh Noah. I’m a private investigator looking for someone and I was hoping you or someone here might be able to help me out with a little information?”
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Dev took the man's hand for a firm shake, before letting his hands naturally settle on the belt of his uniform. ”Dev Sarkar, acting sheriff here. Inherited quite the mess.” As the man shared his purpose for being there, the sheriff sighed. ”Missing person? We've been getting a lot of those.” He motioned towards a bulletin board against the wall, overstuffed with pinned leaflets containing faces and names. There were more than a dozen, with more stacked up on the desk nearby. ”Got a name to narrow things down?”
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So that’s what that was…

Noah followed the man’s eyes to the board and the nearby stack of papers. To say there were a few was an understatement, considering the population of the town. Thankfully, Noah had done a bit of research of his own before arriving and knew full well about the oddity in number of open cases. There had indeed been a spike of late and his person of interest would be yet another name to add to the pile.

Unfortunately for Noah, knowing what to expect didn’t make it any easier a pill to swallow. He shook his head, the sigh that jumped from his chest turning into a name in a single breath. ”Eleanor Crowe. Went missing in Connecticut a few months ago and now I’ve got a daughter who wants to see her mother again. She’s reason believe she’d come to South Dakota. To here.”
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The sheriff frowned, brows furrowed in thought. He crossed over to the desk, rifling through the stack of papers. He knew all the names of folks by heart who had gone missing. ”Name doesn't ring a bell,” he admitted, setting the papers back down when his thoughts were confirmed. ”Long way from Connecticut, though,” he mused, looking back at the detective. ”What makes your client think she came to Pine Ridge?”
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”Name’s written all over a journal in her possession.”

Noah's eyes lingered curiously on the bulletin board, automatically trying to memorize each name and face. He didn’t mean to. It just happened. Like a reflex or a defense mechanism that he had little control over. He could already feel the gears turning in his head. Could feel the subtle beat of excitement rising in his chest not unlike the first time he opened a puzzle box and poured the contents on the ground.
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Dev nodded slowly, scratching his chin as he mulled over the revelation. She could have been a local back in the day, but the name Crowe didn't mean much to him. ”Makes sense… due diligence and all, to start here. She could have grown up here. Lots of folks left a few decades back, some kind of mining incident.” The sheriff said it more for himself than anything, as he recognized that look in Noah's eyes. It didn't matter why she came back, just where she had gone. Stopping here was a professional courtesy, a way to get the lay of the land.
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Noah pulled open the Binder that had been tucked under his arm and jotted down a note. ”Pine Ridge.” Noah said aloud, as if naming the first piece. He nodded toward the bulletin board. ”Are these all recent?”
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The question stung, even if it was the most obvious follow-up to seeing just how many people went missing in this small town. ”Last year or so,” he replied bluntly, motioning to the board. ”Try to keep the most recent up, and the kids.” He paused, as if the words tasted sour on his tongue. Dev shook his head, averting his gaze. ”Picking which ones to keep up is the hardest part.”
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It was impossible for Noah to ignore the all too familiar lump that Dev had just placed in his gut, or more accurately replaced after it had been momentarily forgotten about. It was the unfortunate reality for their line of work and something no one who cared ever truly got over.

”I know the feeling. It never really gets easier, even when you get to take some down. You just end up taking that pile home with you.” The head shake he gave Dev read like it was meant for him. An acknowledgement of the difficulty of the job that he himself knew full well, but it was really an unintended physical reaction. Shutting down the part of him that wanted to drop everything to do something, anything, about a wall of missing children was difficult. It was a hole he’d fallen into before and one he knew he wouldn’t be able to climb out of until he was knee deep in a town full of shallow graves and half-drained lakes. There had to be a reason.

Any reason.

Another headshake. Another note. Judging by recent events and the bulletin board itself, Eleanor could be a part of a larger, missing whole, but it was impossible to know for sure. Irresponsible even to assume. It was, however, even more irresponsible to ignore the question of what exactly was going on in Pine Ridge, he tried to reason. Arabella’s mother was involved in some way with the town itself at the very least. He just had to find the pieces directly connecting it and her, and if that happened to involve solving the rest of the board, well that was just good investigative work.

”You said ‘acting Sheriff’ and I noticed the website had a Sheriff Hawthorne. Is he also missing?”
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”Damn, gotta get that fixed… I’ll have to give Sutton a call about that.” Dev repositioned his hands onto his belt again, letting out a few harsh puffs as he considered what he should share. It wasn’t exactly an investigation, and the medical examiner had said a lot of words that ultimately boiled down to one simple fact. ”Hawthorne is in the cemetery, died of natural causes in his sleep.” It was a callous way to describe it, but it was easier than trying to find more polite ways. They had more pressing matters. ”You got a picture of this Eleanor? Name doesn’t ring a bell, but a face might.”
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”I’m sorry to hear that,” Noah said. It was genuine, if brief. A mental note had been checked and that was that, but it was no easy task to step into such a role, especially during such a strange time.

He flipped to the back of the binder to where a picture of Eleanor had been clipped, but as he turned the last page, he was reminded of another image he’d brought with him. Tucked into the corner just beneath Eleanor’s and peeking out from under the corner was the picture he’d snapped of a very specific drawing.

There was a brief pause before he pulled the more relevant picture out and held it up so Dev could see it clearly. ”This is from a few months ago.”
Webboysurf   
Dev studied the picture as it was shown, squinting as he got a good look. It took a moment, but there was a sudden look of recognition. He had seen the woman, but only briefly. ”I'm afraid I don't have much to offer in terms of details… but she was here.” He sighed, shaking his head. He remembered the red hair, as it was a bit unusual around Pine Ridge. It was hard to keep track of all the tourists, unless they did something particularly memorable. Plenty of young adults who want to get freaky in a ghost town, some who wandered into unsafe areas, and some who got a little too into roleplaying like they were from the 1800s. This woman, Eleanor, was none of those.

It was the circumstance of when he saw her. It was late, past the closing time of the bar as he was going to stumble his way home. Warren was busy, so the sheriff didn't have his usual way home via his brother. Most people were either turned in or on some sort of guided (or unguided) tour of the older parts of town if they were out that late. Eleanor had been standing at the corner… though which corner eluded him. She was staring at a building, as if she were some lifelike sculpture. It was strange. When she did turn to look in his direction, her gaze never met his. It was spooky, even for a ghost town like Pine Ridge.

”Saw her on main street, probably around eleven a couple weeks back. I think it was a Tuesday. It was weird she was out so late… but I was off duty and I wasn't gonna book an old lady for loitering in a town like this.” His description was nonchalant, though the reality was clear on his face. Dev wasn't looking forward to adding a new picture to the board.
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”Makes sense, and a sighting is plenty. That’s confirmation and a timeframe,” Noah began to say, although the breath that followed after was framed as a ‘but’. Reduced now from ‘months’, two weeks was still a pretty large frame of time. ”But uh… was she alone?” He furrowed his brows. ”What was she doing?”
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”She was alone,” Dev admitted, brow furrowed as he tried to remember anything he could. The memory was fuzzy, like a drunken dream that he couldn't quite grasp. Had she been doing anything? He didn't think so. She was staring at something: a building, or maybe the mountain? The sheriff shook his head. ”I only saw her for a moment. All I saw was her on the street corner. She could have been waiting for someone, or she could have been lost. It's hard to say.”
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And that was it. No familiarity with her name. No direction. No obvious intent. Just a face, a time and a mystery. Noah jotted down another note as he shifted a piece of a puzzle around on an empty board in his head, orientating it aimlessly as if he could see the image with just his single frame of reference. But he could not. There was too little here and he doubted he’d be able to glean anymore information from the Sheriff. The last sighting of her was weeks ago, alone and lost, and there was too much strange going on in a town full of disappearing people for similar activity to immediately scream Eleanor. He’d have to move on. Get closer to the few clues he had.

He nodded, both for Dev but also as acknowledgement to himself. This was the starting point and all things considered, he’d had worse. ”Okay. That’s a start. I’ll head down to the corner and take a look. See if I recognize anything from my other notes but uh… if you end up remembering anything else or she just happens to turn up…” Noah replaced the image and pulled out a card. On it, Irving Investigations was printed in black ink dead center with his name and number beneath it. He handed it to the Sheriff.

”I’m going to do what I can to keep this name off your board.”
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The sheriff took the card, giving it a once over before sliding it into his back pocket. Given Noah's appearance, it seemed the private sector paid a lot better than a sheriff's salary. Maybe Dev had earned that kind of reprieve from the front lines, or maybe he deserved to be stuck in a place like this. He gave Noah a firm nod, holding out his hand for another shake. ”It would be nice to have a win for once around here, Irving. I'll loop my officers in on this, and we'll help however we can.”
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"I appreciate that." Noah said, accepting the handshake. "Thank you, Sheriff."

Noah turned to leave, but hesitated. A thought had lingered too long in the back of his head, and now that he'd been reminded of it, it was refusing to leave him alone. "Actually..." Noah turned around and pulled from the back of his binder the second photo he'd been holding... or hiding. It was a photo of an old sketch of some person of interest, the original nearly 200 years old.

"This is going to be a no, but have you seen anyone who might look similar to this?" He wanted to roll his eyes, but he managed to control himself.



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#2e6f40 ....|..... outfit .....|..... pine ridge clinic & pharmarcy


Frank Short arrived at Willow Hyde's clinic twenty-two minutes early because he had absolutely nothing better to do and because old age had apparently transformed punctuality into a personality trait. The morning air bit through his denim jacket the second he climbed out of his rust-speckled pickup, and he immediately regretted every decision that had led him to being outside before nine in the morning. Damp frost clung stubbornly to the edges of the parking lot where the sun hadn't quite reached yet, and the Black Hills rose dark and pine-covered beyond town. Frank shoved both hands into his pockets and scowled at the weather like it had personally insulted him. "Too old for this shit," he grumbled as he shuffled toward the front door. "Waking before noon is a crime, a damned crime."

The clinic smelled faintly of coffee, antiseptic, and whatever candle one of the nurses kept hidden behind the reception desk despite being told not to. Frank knew because he'd been coming here for years. High blood pressure. Cholesterol. The occasional broken bone from forgetting he wasn't thirty anymore. He lowered himself into one of the waiting room chairs with the careful determination of a man whose joints had become active participants in every movement. The seat creaked beneath him. Frank pointed an accusing finger at it. "Don't start." He wasn't entirely certain whether he was speaking to the chair or his lower back.

A magazine sat abandoned on the side table beside him. Frank picked it up, flipped through exactly three pages, then tossed it back with visible disappointment. Twenty years ago waiting rooms had better reading material. These days everything was healthy recipes, local news, and articles about stretching exercises, he should have brought one of his magazines. Busty Maid Manor always served to make him feel extra springy in the early morning, even if it wasn’t technically socially acceptable. His gaze drifted toward the reception desk where a young mother was trying unsuccessfully to stop her toddler from licking the armrest of a chair. Frank watched the battle unfold for several seconds before shaking his head. "Kid's building an immune system," he informed nobody in particular. "Might end up stronger than all of us."

The truth of why he was there sat heavily in the back of his mind, though not heavily enough to produce actual shame. Embarrassment, maybe. Irritation, definitely. He'd spent the better part of a week trying to convince himself the problem would simply disappear if he ignored it hard enough. Unfortunately biology remained stubbornly unconvinced by his strategy. The memory of a certain grandmother from the community center flashed through his thoughts, followed immediately by the realization that he was currently seventy-six years old and sitting in a doctor's office because of it. Frank pinched the bridge of his nose and let out a long sigh. "Hell of a way to stay active, though, and she told me to stay active." he muttered, snickering to himself.

When the door to the examination hallway finally opened and the receptionist called his name, Frank pushed himself upright with a theatrical groan that echoed through the waiting room. Every joint in his body contributed an opinion to the effort. He tugged down his jacket, straightened his collar, and limped toward the door with what he imagined was dignity. "Let's get this over with." he announced to the universe at large.

”I am a good doctor and I love my job,” had become a daily affirmation that Willow told herself in the morning and throughout her workday. It was very rare that she ever questioned either of those facts, but there was something about the first person she was scheduled to meet with today that often had her repeating her mantra over and over until she believed it again. While she waited for the nurse to check Frank’s vitals in the room just outside, she organized his files and collected the information she needed before he was directed towards her office.

There wasn’t anything extravagant about it. On the far side was the desk where her laptop sat, and a window that allowed warm light from the sun in. Its light hit a row of crystals that decorated the seal, and it gave the plant by her computer its much needed nutrients. Everything about the room was safe and homely, only clinical where it needed to be. It could almost be mistaken for a guest room in a log cabin, if not for the rows of supplies on the walls, and the sink, and those three chairs that every family doctor’s office seemed to have that sat adjacent to the desk.

She did not dislike Frank, but when he entered the room she preemptively inhaled. The only problem with him was that it was so difficult to get him to actually listen and take her advice, or to continuously take his prescribed medicine as he was— well— perscribed. Despite this, she turned around and smiled warmly as he entered. ”Good morning,” she greeted. ”You were originally scheduled to come in a few months from now, but as I understand you needed to come in sooner. Want to tell me about what’s been going on?”

It wasn’t like him to willingly come into the office, so she would be lying if she said she wasn’t concerned.

Frank shuffled into the office with the weary determination of a man who was too stubborn to admit he was aging in any way other than graceful. The warmth of the room hit him immediately, carrying the scent of sunlight, clean linens, and whatever plant Willow kept alive near the window through some kind of witchcraft. His gaze landed on the familiar chairs and his expression soured on principle. "You should invest in the ones that are higher up," he grouched as he lowered himself into the seat with several concerning pops from his knees. "It's like I'm sitting on the damn ground, Willow. These knees aren't what they used to be, you know." He shifted once, twice, then settled with a dissatisfied grunt that suggested the chair had personally offended him.

The sunlight spilled across the floorboards and warmed one side of his jacket while he glared suspiciously at the crystals lined along the window. Frank had been coming here long enough to know they weren't hurting anybody, but that didn't stop him from eyeing them like they might suddenly start judging his life choices. Which, admittedly, would be fair. His fingers drummed against his crossed arms while Willow spoke, and for a moment he looked almost tempted to dodge the question entirely. That impulse lasted all of ten seconds.

A silence stretched between them as Frank stared toward the wall behind her desk. The admission seemed to physically pain him. His jaw worked once. Then twice. Finally he let out a long breath through his nose and slumped deeper into the chair like a condemned man accepting his sentence. "I've got crabs." The words arrived blunt and irritated, hurled into the room like he was angry at the diagnosis for existing. His arms crossed tighter over his chest as he scowled at absolutely everything. "And before you start, no, I don't need a lecture. It’s not gonna stop me from getting it on with those old birds, so don’t even bother."

Frank's gaze slid toward the window before immediately darting away again. A faint flush crept into the weathered lines of his face despite his best efforts to maintain dignity. "In my defense," he muttered, sounding considerably less confident now that the words were actually leaving his mouth, "Martha Dawson has been lying about her age since the Carter administration, and she was real persuasive about the community center storage room being empty." He couldn’t help the sly little grin that slid onto his wrinkled face. "And no one else uses the pool on Tuesday afternoons, ever had sex in a pool Willow? It’ll change your life."

Willow wasn’t sure what she expected. She wasn’t sure that she expected anything at all, yet somehow she found herself shocked and not surprised whatsoever. As Frank’s explanation went on, and the name Martha Dawson registered as a name and face she knew adding more vividness to the picture she did not want painted, she sighed and clicked her tongue. Her fingers found her keyboard and she started to navigate the compendium of creams and shampoos used to treat this particular STI.

”Well,” she started. ”I can’t say that I’ve ever done anything like that in a pool, no.” It didn’t take long for her to find what she was looking for, and she clasped her hands together afterwards and turned her attention fully to the man across from her. ”The good news is that I’ve prescribed a shampoo for you to apply ‘down there’ that should take care of your problem after a couple of weeks. The bad news is you’re going to have to keep to yourself until the lice all die out unless you want to spread it around even more.”

Why hadn’t Martha come to see her? Stubborn old lady. If it was bad enough for Frank to come in to complain about it, then she was certain it wasn’t a comfortable experience whatsoever. She was a little surprised to see that Frank was so open with her about it though. When they first met, it was hard to get any information at all out of him. There were a lot of issues of trust and confidentiality they had to slowly work through to get to this point, so, she supposed she was happy to see him today… in a way.

”I’m glad you came to see me instead of just trying to deal with it, though. All you have to do is apply the shampoo you’ll get nightly, and make sure you thoroughly wash your sheets and towels frequently, and we’ll forget about this problem entirely by the end of the month.” She leaned in a little so they were closer to eye level— maybe had a point about those chairs, weren’t they close to the same height? ”It’s nothing to be ashamed of, you know.”

Willow's reassurance earned a skeptical noise from somewhere deep in Frank's chest. He shifted in the chair again, the vinyl squeaking beneath him as he crossed one ankle over the opposite knee. The movement carried all the confidence of a man who had somehow learned absolutely nothing from the conversation so far. His weathered face remained fixed in a stubborn frown while he processed the instructions about shampoo, clean sheets, and temporary celibacy with visible dissatisfaction.

"Well," he said briskly, as though responding to a business proposal he found mildly inconvenient. One hand lifted from the armrest and began counting off names on his fingers. "I've already been with Barbara, Clarice, Evette, and..." He paused, squinting toward the ceiling while searching his memory. "Eloise." The final name arrived with complete innocence. Frank seemed to be pretending to be entirely unaware that the mention of Eloise was significantly more alarming than the others, given she was the Reverend's wife.

A beat passed. Then another. Frank's brows furrowed slightly as the implications finally began catching up to him. "Actually..." he muttered, rubbing thoughtfully at his chin. "You probably shouldn't put that one in the chart." The suggestion came several seconds too late to be useful. His gaze drifted toward the window as though the trees outside might provide legal counsel.

The old man let out a long sigh and slumped deeper into the chair. For the first time since entering the office, a genuine hint of embarrassment crept into his expression. Not enough to stop talking, unfortunately. "Look, in my defense," he said, holding up a finger, "Nobody told me retirement was eighty percent doctor's appointments and twenty percent trying not to die." His eyes narrowed suspiciously at Willow. "And before you ask, no, I am not calling any of them. Last time I tried making a responsible adult phone call, Barbara accused me of giving her athlete's foot through psychic means, crazy old bird."

Willow opened her mouth to speak, but then remembered the first thought to come into her head wasn’t always the best thing to say aloud. So instead she sighed and itched the side of her face. More names. More faces she did not want to associate with that kind of debauchery. Not that she was a prude, or anything was wrong with sex, but there were very obvious reasons why she did not want to picture Frank with any of those women. She reorganized all the words in her head, cut out the unnecessary ones, and began a reprised version of the original thought she had.

”Well I can’t make you call any of them, and I’m not really in a position to do it myself,” she explained slowly— confidentiality, and all that. ”Does it stress you out, Frank? All of the appointments?”

It was common to be a little restless and anxious all the time at the age he was at. Especially when there were very apparent health issues that needed to be monitored if he wanted to live the rest of his life comfortably. There were more aspects to her job than just prescribing medicine, so her question was earnest and engaged. If there was more that she could help him with than just the STI, she wanted to know what she could do. Maybe if they could have a half-decent conversation about his mental state, he wouldn’t spend so much time… doing the only other thing he seemed to make time for aside from his doctor’s appointments.

”Do you have any hobbies, Frank? I heard about a chess club in town that meets up weekly. Some new friends and a game to learn might help you manage any anxieties you may have.” Willow hadn’t been there herself, but she knew a little bit about everything going on in town. It wouldn’t be hard for her to get him connected with that club, or any other one for that matter, so that he’d have something to do besides spreading crabs to the rest of the elderly in town.

Frank stared at Willow for several long seconds. The question seemed to genuinely confuse him. His brows pulled together behind his glasses and his mouth opened slightly as though he were trying to determine whether she'd actually asked it or if he'd accidentally fallen asleep in the waiting room and started dreaming. Then realization finally caught up with him.

A loud bark of laughter burst from his chest. It rolled through the office with enough force that he had to lean back in the chair and wipe at one eye. "Lord have mercy," he wheezed, shaking his head. "You really think that's the problem?" The amusement lingered in his grin as he settled back down and adjusted his glasses with one finger. "My wife passed ten years ago," he said slowly, as though Willow herself might be struggling to keep up. "Ten. Years."

The old man pointed toward her with the same finger he'd used to adjust his glasses. "And I don't play chess, or pickleball, or shuffleboard, or any of those idiotic sports you young people think we need to stay happy." His hand dropped back to the armrest with a dismissive wave. "I swear every time somebody turns sixty, the entire world decides they need a hobby involving khaki shorts and scorecards." Frank's nose wrinkled with visible disgust at the prospect.

He shifted in the chair again, crossing his arms over his chest while sunlight spilled across the floor beside him. The crystals in the window caught the light and scattered little flecks of color across the desk. Frank ignored them entirely. "The only thing I'm stressed about is how long I have to go without getting some because of these damn crabs." The complaint came out with all the gravity of a man discussing a terminal illness rather than a very treatable inconvenience.

Another shake of his head followed as he settled deeper into the chair. His glasses slipped down his nose and he pushed them back up without thinking. "If I die getting laid, then I'll die a happy man. Mark my words, doctor." His expression grew unexpectedly thoughtful for a moment before a crooked grin returned.

Of course. Willow didn’t know why she expected anything else, really. They teetered on the edge of progress, like a coin progressively spinning out to a stop. Before the final drop, however, it was ripped right off of the table. She sighed, shrugged and then glanced at her computer once more. ”You know, I won’t argue with you. There are plenty of people who are content with that kind of lifestyle.”

Different strokes for different folks, she wanted to say. She felt as though Frank would get too much of a kick out of that, though.

Willow hardly remembered Frank’s wife. The last time she saw her was before she left for college— so, a long time ago. She passed before she returned to Pine Ridge, and didn’t learn the details until some time after Frank became one of her patients. They only knew each other in passing, as most knew one another in this small town, so it didn’t come as a surprise to her to learn. Part of her wondered if her patient was any different before that time, because either way she only came to know the man he was after.

”You should be able to pick up your prescription in a couple of hours,” she mentioned. ”Keep yourself clean and if you have any problems in the meantime you’re free to call. I’ll check in on you myself in a couple of weeks to see whether or not it worked.” As she looked back at Frank, she smiled in that same unjudging way she always had with her patients. The light from the window refracted through the crystals, causing the side of her face to sparkle in a strange, multicolored glow.

”Is there anything else you wanted to talk about?”

Frank waved a dismissive hand through the air before Willow had even finished the question. The motion carried all the finality of a man who considered the appointment concluded the second he'd been promised medication. The crystals scattered little flecks of color across the desk as he pushed himself forward in the chair and planted both hands on his knees.

"Nope. I think we've both suffered enough for one morning," he said. A grin tugged at the corner of his mouth as he slowly hauled himself upright. Every joint between his ankles and shoulders seemed determined to announce its existence during the process. "I'll see you in a couple weeks."

The old man steadied himself once he was standing and adjusted his glasses back into place. For all his complaining, his expression softened slightly as he looked at her. Willow had spent years patching him back together after his own questionable decisions, and somehow she still greeted him with patience every time he walked through the door. "Thanks, kid." The gratitude came simply, without sarcasm or some joke attached to it.

A groan escaped him as he turned toward the door and began shuffling across the office. His hand found the doorknob, then paused there for a moment. "And if anybody asks," he added without looking back, "This appointment was about my blood pressure." The request was immediately followed by a snort at his own joke before he pulled the door open and disappeared into the hallway, muttering something under his breath about community centers being a poor hook up spot, and there wasn’t even a jacuzzi, it was blasphemous.

Willow wasn’t sure if it was worth mentioning that the hundred different confidentiality laws in place would prevent her from answering any questions about him in the first place. She decided against it, and watched as his back disappeared behind the doorway. It was all she could do but shake her head and turn back to her laptop. ”I don’t even have a spell that could fix whatever screw’s loose in there…” she murmured, though there was a smile on her face as she spoke.



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#3c6c6b ....|..... outfit ............... #fcb04d ....|..... outfit ............... main street


Warren Boone started his morning with theft.

The decision came shortly after five-thirty while he stood on the back porch of his cabin with a mug of coffee warming his hands against the October chill, though if he were being honest he’d been planning this for some time now. The forest stretched away beneath a pale blue dawn, layers of pine-covered hills rolling toward the horizon beneath ribbons of lingering fog. Somewhere through the trees sat Harlan's cabin. He couldn't see the building itself from here, but he knew exactly where it was. More importantly, he could see the familiar shape of his brother's truck parked beneath the dark silhouettes of ponderosa pines. The sight settled something satisfied in him before he'd even taken the first step toward stealing it.

The walk took only a few minutes. Fallen needles softened his footsteps while frost clung silver-white to patches of grass and low brush. The air smelled of pine sap, damp earth, and woodsmoke drifting lazily from chimneys scattered throughout the valley. Warren crossed the distance with the ease of someone who had spent his entire life moving through these woods, coffee still in one hand and a bright pink sticky note tucked into his jacket pocket. By the time he reached the truck, his grin had stretched across his face like the Grinch when he decided to steal Christmas.

Harlan's old Chevrolet sat exactly where it always did, broad-shouldered and immaculate despite its age. Black paint gleamed faintly beneath the dawn light while the orange stripe along the side caught hints of gold from the rising sun filtering through the branches overhead. Warren rested a hand briefly against the hood before climbing inside. The truck started immediately beneath his touch. No grinding. No hesitation. Just the deep, smooth rumble of a well-maintained engine settling into a contented idle. Warren nodded once, pleased with himself on multiple levels. He’d made a copy of the key weeks ago.

He drove only as far as the end of the driveway before parking and jogging back through the cold. The sticky note found its place squarely on Harlan's front door. Frost crackled beneath his boots as he stepped back to admire his handiwork, hands shoved into the pockets of his jacket while his breath curled pale in the air before him. Somewhere behind those walls his brother slept peacefully, entirely unaware that both his truck and his morning routine had already been hijacked. Warren felt no guilt whatsoever.

"Perfect."

The drive into Pine Ridge carried him beneath a canopy of autumn color. Gold aspens burned against dark evergreens. Red leaves tumbled lazily across the road whenever a gust of wind swept through the valley. The heater hummed softly while the truck's engine purred beneath him, carrying him toward a town that seemed to be waking all at once. Storefront lights flickered on. Volunteers hauled decorations onto sidewalks. Orange banners stretched between old brick buildings along Main Street while carved pumpkins appeared on porches and windowsills like cheerful sentries announcing the season.

Months of planning had transformed the town into something festive without losing the worn charm Warren loved about it. The wrought-iron lamp posts wore garlands of autumn leaves and small bundles of dried corn stalks. Hand-painted signs advertised pie contests, costume contests, hayrides, pumpkin carving, and the haunted house that had become the centerpiece of the entire festival. He hated to admit it, and he’d never do it to Samuel’s face, but it was an impressive turn around. It was probably all Sutton.

He backed Harlan's truck carefully into position near the center of the designated trunk-or-treat area. The tailgate faced the street while the front bumper sat near the curb, giving children easy access once the festivities began. Boxes of candy, glow sticks, toy spiders, vampire fangs, and small prizes sat in totes on the sidewalk, covered by a tarp to protect it from the early morning dew. Warren climbed out and immediately caught the scent of hay, pumpkins, and fresh coffee drifting from nearby booths still being assembled. The town buzzed with the low, steady rhythm of people building something together.

Two younger wolves were already waiting beside a trailer stacked high with decorations. Caleb balanced a hay bale against one shoulder while carrying two pumpkins beneath his arm, his breath puffing visibly in the cold. Mason struggled with another bale nearly half his size, boots dragging against the pavement while he stubbornly refused help. Together they began shaping the display around the truck. Pumpkins gathered around the tires. Hay bales formed seating along the edges. Strings of orange lights wound through everything until the old Chevrolet looked less like a work truck and more like the centerpiece of a harvest festival.

Warren folded his arms across his chest and watched the scene take shape while the morning sun climbed higher over the rooftops. Children would swarm these streets before long. Parents would carry hot cider and paper cups of coffee while chasing sugar-fueled toddlers between booths. Teenagers would linger near the haunted house pretending they were above the festivities while participating in every part of it anyway. The thought settled warmly beneath his ribs, and he found himself smiling before he realized it.

"Little more left," he called toward Mason, pointing toward one of the hay bales. "If somebody trips, Samuel'll bury me in paperwork until Christmas… or just bury me." He grinned at the idea, but Mason and Caleb looked startled and angry for a moment before he waved them off. Warren wasn’t scared of Samuel, it was Clint you had to worry about. The boys were too young to know that though, so he let them live in a world where their Alpha was fearless in the face of vampires.

Warren's gaze drifted beyond them toward the mountains rising dark and familiar beyond town. Cold wind tugged at his jacket and carried the scent of pine down from the hills. Somewhere out there, Harlan was probably waking up to discover his truck was missing. After a quick phone call, Charlie was quickly dragged into the shenanigan's. Warren's smile widened as he turned back toward the display and grabbed a pumpkin himself, settling comfortably into the work as Pine Ridge slowly came alive around him.

While most of the pack had quickly got to work laying out pumpkins, stringing garland, and lights, or even running over to help the Sterling brothers set up their booths without getting into a fight… Jesse did not. Born to the pack, Jesse had that kind of chip on his shoulder that said he was entitled to his place among them although he did little to earn the respect that came with it. He was the type of person that once you heard he was tagging along or showing up everyone groaned and rolled their eyes.

He looked and acted like a junky. He had virtually no meat on his bones, skinny enough to be a living skeleton with greasy black hair that reached his jaw, and face tattoo had to have been a drunken decision, because no one in their right mind actively chose to get ‘no regerts’ stamped across their forehead.

In typical Jesse fashion, he wasn’t there to actually lend a hand but more lounge around, giving unwanted commentary and generally just being in the way. He laid in the back of Harlan’s truck, knees hooked over the tailgate with his feet hanging free, swinging them lazily back and forth. One arm was bent behind his head while a billow of smoke rose from his cigarette as he took a long drag.

Volunteers moved steadily between booths and folding tables while truck beds unloaded pumpkins, decorations, and crates of supplies. Warren crossed the street with a bale of hay balanced against his shoulder, boots crunching over scattered leaves that had blown loose from the gutters overnight, and immediately spotted Jesse stretched across the back of Harlan's truck like an unwanted cat that had claimed ownership of the place.

His jaw tightened.

Jesse had somehow managed to make himself comfortable in the middle of a worksite. A cigarette smoldered between his fingers while his muddy boots hung over the tailgate, lazily kicking at the cold air. Thin streams of smoke curled upward through strings of orange lights that still needed securing, drifting across hay bales and cardboard boxes packed full of candy. Around him, everyone else worked. Caleb hauled another pumpkin toward the display with both arms wrapped around it while Mason struggled with a stack of wooden signs nearly as tall as he was, and neither looked particularly thrilled to see Jesse contributing absolutely nothing.

Warren dropped the hay bale beside the truck with a muffled thump and stepped forward. "Get out of the damn truck." The back of his hand cracked against Jesse's boot as he passed, knocking the swinging foot aside before he pointed toward the cigarette. "And put that thing out before you burn half the festival down." Wind stirred through the street and rattled the dried corn stalks tied to a nearby lamp post. "We've got hay stacked everywhere, decorations hanging overhead, and enough cardboard packed in that bed to keep a fire going until Christmas. If Harlan's truck ends up a pile of melted steel because you wanted a smoke break, he'll string you up by your ankles… or worse."

Jesse snorted, pulling the cigarette from his lips to flick ashes somewhere over the side of the truck without a care. "I’m not scared of Harlan," he snickered, taking another drag. "I’ve met pups with more bite than him."

Warren shook his head once, slow and unimpressed, before adjusting the pumpkin tucked beneath one arm. "Then you're dumber than you look." The words came easily, delivered with the same certainty someone might use to comment on the weather. His gaze lingered on Jesse for a moment longer before drifting toward the mountains rising beyond town, dark pines crowding their slopes beneath streaks of gold and orange foliage. Harlan had never needed to bark the loudest or throw the first punch. There was a reason people listened when he spoke and moved when he decided to act.

Warren turned back toward the truck and set the pumpkin into place beside a hay bale. "Anybody who isn't at least a little scared of my brother hasn't been paying attention." He brushed straw from his hands and glanced over his shoulder again. "Or they're too stupid to realize when they're standing in front of a bear trap."

The cigarette smell lingered stubbornly in the air. Warren folded his arms across his chest and looked over the setup they had spent all morning building, from the pumpkins gathered around the tires to the strings of lights hanging above the tailgate. Children would be crawling all over this section of the street in a few hours. Families would crowd around the truck for candy and photographs. The image of Jesse dropping ash into the decorations made something sour settle behind his ribs. "You've got hands. Use them." His gaze shifted toward the others working nearby before settling back on Jesse. "Help Caleb and Mason finish setting up, or find somewhere else to be until the festival starts. I'm not paying people to stand around and be decorative, and if I were it certainly wouldn’t be you."

The junkie wannabe’s brows rose incredulously from where he remained unwaveringly cemented to the bed of the truck. "Who the fuck you kiddin’? You ain’t paying any of us?"

A bark of laughter escaped Warren before he could stop it. Cold air caught the sound and carried it down the street where volunteers continued hanging decorations between storefronts and arranging pumpkins along the sidewalks, and a few of them smiled at the jovial sound. None of them saw the cool anger in his face, the expression directed at Jesse. The autumn wind stirred the hem of his flannel while dried leaves scraped across the pavement around his boots. Nearby, Caleb suddenly found a reason to focus very hard on stacking hay bales. Mason looked equally invested in a string of lights that definitely did not require his attention. Neither wanted to be standing anywhere near Jesse when Warren stopped smiling.

"I'm not paying you. I’m paying everyone else because they know better than to waste my time." He stared at him for a moment longer, letting the unspoken threat linger in the air, before he turned and moved to help Caleb.

The festival wasn’t going to start until nighttime settled over Pine Ridge, but that didn’t stop eager kids and curious tourists from creeping through the various booths and attractions, like if they got the lay of the land then they would be able to optimize their time to the fullest potential. One of said people was a woman in her early thirties with hair as orange as a pumpkin wearing a witch costume that left little to the imagination. The skirt barely reached below her bottom, the neckline was plunging, and fishnets clung to her pale legs. The most surprising part wasn’t how she walked through town in six inch heels like they were no different than hiking books, but the young child that bounced alongside her. The young boy was dressed in a pumpkin costume two sizes too big, wild blond curls poking out from beneath the oversized hat that refused to stop drooping into his face. One hand held tight to his mother’s while the other kept pushing that pesky hat farther back on his head so he could gawk at the festival set up in awe.

Of course the moment his big blue eyes caught sight of the trunk-or-treat, a squeal of excitement tore through the area. Little feet scurried at full speed, dragging his mom along behind him as he beelined straight toward the big black truck. "Mommy! Mommy! Look!" He pointed excitedly at Warren and the others around him as they milled about, setting up the final touches.

"Sweetie, it’s not time yet," the mother tried to argue through bright laughter, trailing along behind the excited pumpkin while her other hand kept her witch hat from flying off with every gust of wind.

Her pace slowed as they neared the truck, her gaze immediately settling on Warren, shamelessly watching his arms flex or the tensing of muscles along his back every time he lifted or moved something. She took a second while his back was turned to adjust her dress and brush a stubborn lock of hair back behind her ear. "Hey Warren," she finally greeted him, his name slipping off her tongue, honeyed and sweet like he was the best thing the festival had to offer.

Jesse shifted, propping himself up on his elbows as his gaze drifted over the back of the truck toward the voice in question. A cigarette hung lazily from his lips as he looked her up and down from the tippy top of her witch hat down past the fishnets to her black heels. He let out a pleased whistle, accented with a sly smirk. "Hell-ooooo, Heather," he called out.

Warren was halfway through carrying another hay bale toward the truck when the squeal of a child cut through the bustle and drew his attention toward the street. The little boy came first, all oversized pumpkin costume and wild blond curls, barreling toward the display with the singular determination only children possessed. His mother followed close behind, laughing breathlessly while trying to keep both her witch hat and her dignity intact. Warren's gaze lingered briefly on the kid pointing excitedly toward the truck, then Heather spoke his name. The familiar voice settled somewhere behind his eyes like the beginning of a headache while he shifted the hay bale higher against his shoulder and kept moving.

Jesse's whistle reached him a second later.

Warren stopped walking. His jaw tightened. The cigarette smoke curling above the truck mixed unpleasantly with the smell of hay and pumpkins as he turned toward the truck bed. Jesse had hauled himself upright onto his elbows and was already grinning toward Heather like he thought he was charming. Warren pointed directly at him, expression flattening into something that left very little room for interpretation. "Go. Now." The words came low and sharp enough to cut through the noise of the street. His eyes lingered there for another second before dismissing him entirely and turning back toward the actual problem standing in front of him.

"Fuck man, who pissed in your Cheerios?" Jesse grumbled as he sat up fully and scooted toward the tailgate of the truck. He drew in a large puff of smoke before hopping down, dirty boots crunching whatever straw, leaves, or unlucky decor was underfoot. His gaze drifted between Warren and Heather with a knowing curve to one brow. "He could use a good lay. Warren’s been awfully upright recently." Before his Alpha could crack him over the head, Jesse scurried out of arm’s reach and headed down the street, leaving the festival setup for those who cared.

Warren's jaw locked so hard it ached. Jesse's laughter drifted down the street alongside the smell of cigarette smoke while his boots crunched through fallen leaves and scattered straw. Orange banners snapped overhead in the wind. Children continued weaving between booths while volunteers hauled decorations into place, blissfully unaware of how close Warren was to grabbing the younger wolf by the back of the neck and rattling whatever loose screws remained in his skull. His fingers curled once against his palms before he forced them open again.

A slow breath filled his lungs. Cold air carried the scent of pine from the mountains and settled some of the heat simmering beneath his skin. Warren rolled his shoulders back and let the tension ease out little by little. Jesse wasn't worth losing his temper over. He rarely was. The kid lived his entire life like somebody constantly testing the strength of a wooden bridge of his own creation by jumping on it, convinced it would never collapse beneath him. One day he was going to discover otherwise.

His gaze followed Jesse's retreating figure for another moment before drifting toward the dark forest rising beyond town. The full moon was only days away. Warren could already feel the subtle shift moving through the pack, that restless energy gathering beneath everyone's skin as the moon grew fuller overhead. Most wolves managed it well enough. Jesse's control over his wolf was about as impressive as his control over the rest of his life, which was to say it was piss poor.

Warren huffed quietly through his nose and bent to straighten one of the pumpkins Jesse had nearly kicked over climbing from the truck. Straw clung to his sleeves as he adjusted a hay bale and brushed it away with rough hands. The kid would regret mouthing off eventually. Warren would make sure of it. For now, there was a festival to finish building, children already wandering the streets, and enough work left to keep his hands occupied while the irritation slowly bled away into the cold autumn morning.

Heather looked exactly like she always had. Perfect makeup. Perfect hair. Perfect timing. The costume looked better suited to a nightclub than a family festival, though Warren supposed that was hardly surprising. He adjusted his grip on the hay bale and resumed walking, boots crunching softly through scattered leaves gathered along the curb. "Morning." The greeting came polite enough, if somewhat rough around the edges, as he passed her and lowered the bale into place beside the others surrounding the truck.

Loose straw clung to his sleeves as he straightened and brushed his hands together. Around them the festival continued taking shape. Someone down the street tested a speaker system. Fresh coffee drifted from the diner each time the door opened. Children darted between booths while parents called after them, and above it all the autumn wind rattled dried cornstalks tied to the lamp posts. Warren nodded toward the display and finally glanced back toward Heather and the little boy. "Bit early. Think the kids'll enjoy it more once everything's actually finished." His attention settled briefly on the boy's wide-eyed excitement before returning to the work waiting around him. "Though he's got the right idea. Half the fun's looking forward to it."

"Jack’s been looking forward to it for weeks," Heather mused while affectionately brushing one of the boy’s wild curls out of his face and tucking it behind his ear. "Figured I’d let him get a sneak peek… And you know how I always liked watching you work," she added, her voice slipping back into that silky lilt that used to work on him so well. Her free hand lifted, gently plucking straw from Warren’s bicep, being sure to let her touch linger for a second or two longer than was necessary. "Plus, you haven’t been returning my calls. Figured this way you couldn’t ignore me." She tilted her head to the side slightly, forcing herself a bit more into his line of sight as the wind blew copper curls across her face.

The touch nearly did it. Not because it stirred anything in him. Quite the opposite. Warren felt his patience fraying thread by thread as her fingers lingered against his arm. Around them, Main Street buzzed with activity. Warren stood still through all of it, staring at the hay bale he was positioning into place and trying very hard not to let his eye twitch. His gaze shifted toward Heather slowly.

"Why," he started, each word measured carefully, "Would I answer your calls?" The question hung between them while he brushed stray pieces of straw from his flannel. His attention lingered on her face for a moment before drifting downward toward the little boy standing beside her. The sight struck the same place it always did. For a second he saw the shape of a future that had once seemed possible before it dissolved beneath the weight of memory.

"We both know what you did." The words came without heat. Years had worn the anger smooth, leaving something heavier behind. Warren adjusted another pumpkin near the truck wheel and straightened, hands settling against his hips while the wind tugged loose strands of hair across Heather's face. Jack continued staring at the decorations with complete fascination, blissfully unaware of the conversation unfolding above his head. Warren found himself looking at the boy longer than he intended before forcing his attention elsewhere.

"I'm not interested, Heather." His voice remained gruff, steady, carrying the same certainty he'd carried into every conversation they'd had for years now. "Do yourself a favor and get back with the kid's father. Give him a real family to grow up with. Stop chasing something that isn't going to happen."

Before she could argue, before she could smile that smile or twist the conversation into circles he'd already walked a hundred times, Warren bent to grab another hay bale. The rough straw scratched against his palms as he lifted it onto his shoulder and turned away. Cold autumn air filled his lungs. Work waited. The festival waited. A street full of children would be running through here before long. Warren focused on that instead, carrying the weight across the pavement while the sounds of the town swallowed the conversation behind him.

The thing about Pine Ridge's Halloween decorations was that they had not meaningfully changed since approximately 1987, which Harper knew because Cece had told her so. Cece had been alive even then, you see, though she got cagey about exactly how much "even then" actually covered. But back to the decorations. They were the same orange and black streamers, the same plastic skeletons with the same slightly broken arm on the one that always went above the bar mirror, and the same ceramic pumpkins that Hank brought out of the back room every October 31st. Halloween was one of the town's biggest nights of the year, considering almost the whole town came out for it every time. Granted, this year would be the first year they would have so many big outdoor events (like frickin' carnival games!) going on for a bunch of random tourists to participate in. The mayor had called it an "economic development initiative," or something like that. Cece, by contrast, had called it "a chance for a bunch of city folk getting lost in our woods and needing rescue, which I am not doing this year, and you better tell Warren I mean that," (she didn’t).

Even so, Harper had been coming out for Halloween herself since she was small enough to ride on Cece's shoulders, and she had loved every single iteration of it without exception. She still loved it, to be fair. She just thought certain things should change along with the town, like the streamers she was currently wrestling with. They could maybe be a different colour by now, or at the very least not slightly faded from two decades of storage in Hank's back room, where they doubtless shared shelf space with mouse droppings and god knows what else. Not to mention that the festival was outside and would presumably continue without anyone setting foot in the saloon until well after dark, if ever. Hank knew this. Hank decorated anyway. He had decorated every October 31st for as long as Harper could remember, and she suspected he would continue doing so long after everyone else had stopped bothering.

She was perched on the second rung of the stepladder with a length of orange streamer pinned between her teeth and both hands occupied with the sticky tack that never quite stuck properly to the saloon's old timber walls. She pressed the streamer to the wall and stepped back onto the ladder's bottom rung to assess. The streamer immediately sagged in the middle, peeling away from the timber in a slow, mournful curl.

"Hey Hank?" Harper called toward the back room. "Quick question for ya."

A pause. Then the sound of boots on old floorboards, followed by Hank himself emerging from the stockroom. He was carrying a cardboard box labelled HALLOWEEN - FRAGILE in block letters.

"If you're about to ask if we can finally throw out some of these things," Hank said, setting the box on the bar, "the answer is no. They’re pretty much tradition."

"They’re depressing is what they are," Harper shot back, hopping down from the ladder.

"No, they're classic." Hank said like the matter was settled and the only sensible response was to nod and move on. Harper had heard that tone approximately four thousand times since she started working here at sixteen, and she had yet to find a single argument that could penetrate it.

Still… she couldn't quite help herself. That was the thing about Harper. She could see a losing battle from a mile away, could map out exactly how it would end, and would still walk toward it with her chin up just on principle alone.

"Classic and depressing aren't mutually exclusive," she pointed out, crossing to the bar. Her fingers found the edge of the cardboard box and pulled it closer, the flap scraping against the wood. She peered inside like she was looking at evidence of a crime and picked up one of the pumpkins inside. She held it at arm’s length, turning it slowly. It was light, and its painted face grinned up at her with a sort of vacant cheer.

"Hank. This one has a crack in it."

"That just gives it character," he said.

"It's missing a chunk…." She turned the pumpkin over, and a small piece of dried ceramic fell out of the bottom and bounced across the bar. She stared at it. Hank stared at it. Neither of them moved to pick it up.

"Distinguished character," Hank amended. His expression hadn't changed, but there was something in the set of his jaw that suggested he was fighting a smile.

Harper set the pumpkin down and turned to face him with her arms crossed. "Right…" she drawled. "Anyway, as promised, I fixed the streamers for ya, but I should probably head out."

"Head out where?" Hank asked, reaching into the box for the skeleton with the broken arm.

"Promised I'd help with the trunk or treat setup," she said, grabbing her jacket from behind the bar and shrugging into it. The denim was stiff with cold, and Harper shivered once before the fleece lining started doing its job."Said I'd be there before ten."

Hank made a sound that landed somewhere between acknowledgment and mild betrayal at being left alone with the decorations. He lowered the skeleton onto the bar with a thump and fixed her with a look that suggested he was reconsidering every kind thing he had ever thought about her.

"Oh, you'll be fine," Harper added, waving him off and heading for the door. "You've got distinguished character to keep you company, remember?" She threw him a teasing smile over her shoulder and then pushed through the swinging door. It creaked behind her, a sound so familiar it had stopped registering years ago, and then she was outside.

The wind came down off the mountain with that particular October bite to it that Pine Ridge locals learned early to either respect or ignore, and Harper had long since chosen the latter. Respect was for things that could actually hurt you. The cold was just uncomfortable, and uncomfortable had never stopped her from doing anything. Her breath curled pale in the air as she tucked her hands into her pockets and took stock of what the morning had built while she was inside arguing about ceramic pumpkins.

The street was closed to traffic, which gave the whole thing the quality of a town that had decided to become the fun storybook version of itself for a day. Orange banners snapped between the wrought iron lamp posts overhead, and someone had strung garlands of autumn leaves along the storefronts that Harper had passed a hundred times without ever seeing decorated quite like this. Hand-painted signs pointed toward the pie contest, the costume contest, and the haunted house (the library, of all places, had apparently decided this was their year). She passed a booth being assembled by two people she vaguely recognized from the far end of town and sidestepped a child in a dinosaur costume who was either chasing something or being chased by something. With kids that age, it was hard to tell the difference. The dinosaur's parent—or guardian, or exhausted older sibling—trailed behind with a half-empty cup of coffee, judging by the smell. Hopefully it will be enough.

The smell of something fried and warm drifted from a food stand that definitely hadn't been there yesterday. Funnel cake, maybe, or fried dough, or something else that would leave a slick of grease on her fingers and be positively worth it. Harper's stomach made a quiet but pointed observation about breakfast, a low growl that had nothing to do with the wolf and everything to do with the fact that she'd had nothing but coffee since 6 AM. She ignored it, though, figuring if she helped out fast enough, she could always grab something small after. Besides, she wasn't far now, the trunk or treat area coming into view around the corner of the hardware store, and the sooner she got there, the sooner she could finish and eat.

Harper spotted Harlan's truck immediately, which was hard to miss even when dressed up in pumpkins, hay bales, and strings of orange lights. Caleb and Mason were both nearby, unloading something from the back of it while neither of them was looking directly at Warren as they worked. But it was in such a way that it was obvious what they were trying to do, like two kids pretending they hadn't just broken a vase while standing in the middle of the broken glass. Every few seconds, one of them would glance toward Warren and then immediately find something fascinating to stare at in the opposite direction.

So, of course, Harper chose to follow their carefully averted gazes, her eyes more than willingly landing on her alpha.

Now, Harper had known Warren Boone literally her entire life since he had been born way before her (but not before Cece!), which meant she had a fairly comprehensive catalogue of his expressions and what each of them meant. There was the "Warren who was genuinely happy", which was warm and easy and likely to take up a whole room. Then, there was the "Warren who was pretending to be fine", which looked almost identical but had something careful behind the eyes, along with a slight delay in his reactions as if he was running a slow translation program between what he felt and what he showed.

And then…there was the "Warren who was done with a conversation and had been done with it for some time but was handling it in such a way as not to make a scene in public". That was the one Harper was looking at now.

On the other hand, the woman standing near the truck was pretty in a way that she knew it, but Harper didn't recognize her immediately which meant she wasn't a regular face at the saloon. There was also something about the way she was standing slightly too certain of her welcome that suggested she and Warren had a history. Not that it mattered, really. Harper had approximately zero context for whatever was happening and approximately zero desire to insert herself into the middle of it without any. That was the kind of thing that blew up in your face. She had learned that lesson before.

Besides, there was the boy.

Harper had always had a soft spot for kids. Always. Something about the way they moved through the world like nothing had taught them yet to be careful about what they showed on their face. She had grown up wanting a house full of them someday, a whole chaotic pack of her own, and Cece had told her more than once that it would surely be karmic payback for what Harper herself had put her through, which was probably fair. Cece had also told her, on more than one occasion and with varying degrees of sobriety, that she believed Harper had the maternal instincts of a golden retriever; she was enthusiastic, well-intentioned, and, thus, prone to bringing home stray things she found in the street. So, she was sure to be a good mother, right?

The boy was maybe four years old and stuffed into a pumpkin costume two sizes too big, the orange fabric practically pooling around his ankles. Wild blond curls escaped from beneath a little green stem hat that kept drooping stubbornly into his face, and every few seconds, he would push it back up with one chubby hand, only for it to fall again. He had both palms pressed flat against one of the hay bales and was staring at the orange lights strung through everything with an expression of such pure and total wonder that Harper felt something warm settle in her chest.

She couldn’t help herself.

She skipped on over not to Warren, not to the woman, not to Caleb or Mason, who were still pretending to be busy while obviously watching everything, but to the kid, crouching down to his level and waiting for him to notice her on his own terms. His eyes were blue, she realized, once he had. A bright, clear blue that stood out against all the orange.

He looked at her. She looked at him.

"Hey. Cool costume."

"I’m a Jack-O-Lantern," the boy responded, talking slowly to try and say the name right, yet still stumbling over his own tongue. "Which is funny because I am Jack," he added pointing at himself with a toothy grin and a laugh that carried through the festival area like sunshine on a gloomy day.

Harper's face split into a grin before she could help it. "Jack the Jack-O-Lantern," she said, like this was the best thing she'd heard all morning, which honestly it was. "That's the best costume I've ever seen. And I've seen a lot of costumes."

This was not entirely true, however. She'd seen exactly as many costumes as any other person who had grown up attending the same small town Halloween for twenty-five years, which meant she had seen approximately twenty-five iterations of "ghost made from a bedsheet" and at least seventeen years of someone's uncle showing up in the same werewolf mask that smelled a little of basement. But Jack didn't need to know that. And his laugh was the kind that made you want to say whatever would bring it back anyway.

She stayed crouched at his level for another moment, letting him have it. The hat drooped back into his face, and he pushed it up again with both hands, unbothered, still grinning. Harper had a sudden and very strong feeling that this kid was going to be just fine, whatever else was happening above his head or behind them both.

It was obvious that Heather had every intention of storming away. Her arms were crossed tightly over her chest, offense clear across her face in the way her brows creased and the rising heat that reddened along her cheeks. She turned and went to grab Jack’s hand, only to find him distracted by one of the members of Warren’s little posse that always seemed to follow him around everywhere. For a second or two she simply stood there, scowl tensing every muscle in her face while she tapped her stiletto impatiently against the concrete. Then, because Jack was distracted and she obviously was not pleased with how the conversation ended, she pivoted, crunching dead leaves under foot before stomping after Warren like a pissy stray cat desperate for attention.

"It’s been nearly five years, Warren," she called after him in a sharp whisper, attempting to keep their conversation from carrying across the festival grounds, even though she did little to actually be quiet. The rapid click of her shoes against asphalt preceded her as she hurried in front of him, forcing Warren to stop in his tracks and look her in the eyes. "I’ve apologized countless times… I’ve changed." And in that moment, Heather almost looked like she meant it. Tears pooled along her bottom lashes, but it was the dark glint behind her eyes that said it wasn’t guilt, but embarrassment and anger.

"Jack’s dad left us," she confessed, too ashamed to meet his gaze as she spoke. "I fucked up. I hurt you… And I didn’t realize what I had until I ruined it." Heather crossed her arms once again, strumming her manicured fingers along her upper arm. "But you’re a good man… And Jack could use a role model like that in his life."

Warren stopped.

For a second he simply looked at her. The hay bale dug into his shoulder. Somewhere behind him Caleb and Mason continued working around the truck, the muted scrape of straw and shifting pumpkins carrying through the otherwise quiet stretch of Main Street. He had spent years trying to end this conversation politely. Every ignored call, every brief answer, every refusal had been an attempt to spare her feelings while making himself perfectly clear. Apparently none of it had stuck. His jaw tightened.

"I don't care about your apologies." The words came out rougher than he'd intended. Warren lowered the hay bale to the ground beside his boot and straightened slowly, looking her squarely in the eyes. "I don't care that Jack's dad left. I don't care if he needs a role model." His hands settled on his hips as frustration finally broke through the restraint he'd been holding onto all morning. "Because it isn't going to be me, no matter how many times you try to force it."

Heather had spent five years chasing a version of him that no longer existed. Warren felt tired of it. Tired of the calls. Tired of the conversations. Tired of being treated like a backup plan she could return to because the life she'd chosen hadn't worked out the way she'd hoped. "I'm over you." The statement landed flat and certain. "I was over you the day I found out you cheated on me, and I will never have feelings for you again." He shook his head once. "Move on."

The silence that followed sat heavy between them. Warren looked away first, spotting Harper talking to the damn kid. The sight gave him an excuse to disengage before Heather could pull the conversation into another loop. "You're late." His tone softened as he addressed Harper, though the irritation hadn't fully left his face. "Let's go. We've still got work to do." He turned away from Heather without waiting for a response and headed back toward the truck.

When Warren’s voice reached her, Harper straightened up and turned, reading the situation in approximately one and a half seconds. So, after giving a small wave goodbye to Jack, she fell into step beside him without being asked, because that was what you did for pack. You showed up. You stood next to them. You made it clear, without saying a word, that whatever was happening, they weren't facing it alone.

It was only when they’d gotten far enough that she nudged his arm with her elbow, gentle, familiar. "Sorry about that. The lateness." She probably shouldn't have asked what she did then. Warren was the alpha, which meant his business was his business until he decided otherwise, and whatever had just happened with Heather was clearly the kind of thing he'd been managing on his own for a long time before Harper ever walked into it. She knew that. Cece had practically drilled the importance of boundaries into her head growing up, right alongside don't eat the yellow snow.

But still…she couldn’t quite help herself.

"You good?" She glanced sideways at him.

Warren pressed his lips into a tight line as he walked, forcing his attention onto the steady rhythm of his breathing instead of the conversation he had just escaped. The cool air filled his lungs and carried the lingering scent of hay, dust, and old pavement from the festival setup around them. Usually that was enough. Usually work, movement, and time gave his temper somewhere to go. Harper's question caught him before any of those things could do their job, and he glanced down at her, opened his mouth, then closed it again as he searched for an answer that didn't feel unfair.

She was young. Not a child, but young enough that the instinct remained all the same, and Warren had never been particularly good at ignoring that instinct. Venting to her felt wrong. Harper carried enough of her own burdens without him adding his to the pile, and there was an eleven year gap between them that only seemed larger during moments like this. More than that, he was the Alpha. Harlan might have shoved that responsibility onto his shoulders years ago, but it still belonged to him, and somewhere along the way Warren had accepted that leadership often meant carrying things quietly so nobody else had to.

"I'm fine," he said at last, looking away from her as he let out a slow breath through his nose. The answer felt thin, though no thinner than the hundreds he'd given before it. "Thanks, and you're fine. I'd take you showing up late over Jesse skulking around any day." A soft chuckle escaped him despite himself, and some of the tension finally eased from his shoulders as he shook his head. Jesse had a talent for making everyone else's mistakes seem significantly less irritating by comparison.

Harper accepted ‘I'm fine’ for exactly what it was: a placeholder at best. Instead of pushing, she focused on the latter part of his answer. The part about Jesse. Just like most members of the pack, she'd known Jesse Thornton her whole life, which was not the advantage it might sound like. Growing up in the same pack meant she'd had a front row seat to every bad decision he'd ever made, every bridge he'd burned, and every moment where someone had extended him more patience than he deserved. He wasn't malicious exactly. He was just the kind of person who moved through the world like something was always owed to him that nobody had gotten around to paying yet. That particular brand of entitlement had a way of making everything around him slightly more difficult than it needed to be. But most of the time, honestly, it was just plain exhausting.

"Glad I could be of service," she said. She wanted to add that perhaps someone might want to keep an eye on Jesse before the moon, but something told her that Warren was ten steps ahead of her.

The truck came into view a few moments later, surrounded by stacks of crates and rows of bright orange goodie bags waiting to be loaded. Warren led her around to the tailgate and rested a hand against one of the boxes. The bags were sturdy fabric instead of cheap plastic, each stamped with the Boone Garage logo that had been around longer than either of them. They were meant to be the first stop of the night, big enough for kids to keep using as they collected candy from the rest of the festival. "I just need you to put these in the truck and double-check them while you're at it. Make sure they've all got a decent amount of candy, toys, stickers, all that jazz."

He gestured toward another stack of crates sitting nearby, each one labeled in thick silver marker. "If anything's missing, grab it from those and toss it in. The crates are marked, so you shouldn't have to dig around for half an hour looking for stuff." Warren paused, glancing down at Harper before a slightly wry smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. "I trust you to make it look... what do the kids call it?" He snapped his fingers once, thinking. "Aesthetically pleasing. Yeah, that shit." The smile widened a fraction as he nodded toward the display. "Take a few pictures when you're done too. The Mayor's assistant will probably want them for advertising and all that crap."

Harper looked at the bags before picking one up and turning it over in her hands. It was big enough to fit a small novel, which meant it was sure to hold a lot of candy. She set the bag down after and looked at the crates properly, her mind already formulating a few ideas. The bags needed weight so they didn't tip, so the candy should go at the bottom as the heavier stuff, while the lighter stuff, like the stickers and small toys, could go on top where kids could see them immediately. She could arrange them in the truck bed by size, too, with the tallest bags in the back and the shortest in the front so the smallest kids could reach without their parents having to intervene every thirty seconds. Maybe she could even group the colours if there were enough options, since the fruit chews were bright reds and yellows, and the chocolate bars were deep browns.

There was something satisfying about this kind of work, Harper decided. Perhaps because she could see the result of her effort. Bartending was the same in some ways, like the immediate feedback of a customer's expression when she would set down exactly what they didn't know they wanted. But, at the same time, this was a little different. This was making something for kids who would light up at the sight of it and tell all their friends about the truck with the super cool bags.

She reached for the first crate and glanced back at Warren.
"I've got it. Don’t worry."

Warren watched her for a moment longer, taking in the way she immediately threw herself into the task. Most people would have started tossing things into bags and called it good enough. Harper was already organizing sizes, weights, colors, and accessibility like she was preparing a military operation disguised as a trunk-or-treat. The sight pulled a tight but genuine smile from him. "Thanks, you're the best," he said, meaning every word of it as he folded his arms loosely across his chest.

His gaze drifted toward the mountains rising beyond the edge of town. Pine-covered slopes rolled beneath the autumn sun, patches of gold and rust spreading through the forest where the season had begun its slow work. The smile slipped from his face for a moment as old instincts pulled his attention outward, checking boundaries he couldn't physically see from here but felt responsible for all the same. After a second he looked back at Harper, concern settling quietly into the space where amusement had been.

"You and Cece doing alright?" he asked. The question came easily, absent of judgment or prying curiosity. Warren had spent most of his life keeping an eye on the people around him, especially the younger members of the pack, and Harper had long since earned a permanent place on that list. His hand lifted briefly before falling again. "You know if you ever need anything..." The sentence trailed away because they had both heard it before. He'd said those words enough times over the years that finishing them felt unnecessary.

The meaning remained the same regardless. If either of them needed help, a place to stay, money, backup, advice, or someone willing to show up in the middle of the night without asking questions first, Warren would be there. He wasn't offering because he expected something to be wrong. He was offering because that's what pack was supposed to be. His eyes lingered on her for a moment before a faint smile returned. "Just checking."

"Ohh, we're good," Harper said, which was true. Mostly. She kept her hands moving while she said it, settling a bag into place with more focus than it strictly required. The fabric crinkled under her palms as she smoothed it flat, aligning the logo just so. She didn't look up at Warren, but she could feel him watching her, attentive in that alpha way of his.

Cecelia was fine. Of course, she was fine. Cecelia was always fine. But…she had been quieter than usual the last few days. Not sad exactly. Just…a little solemn for whatever reason. Harper had learned not to ask, however. Cece would tell her what she wanted to tell her when she wanted to tell her, and pushing only ever produced a raised eyebrow and a subject change so smooth she never noticed it happening until they were three topics away from where they'd started.

It didn't help that her own wolf had been a little restless since yesterday. That low hum beneath her skin that meant the moon was coming, which she knew, she always knew, it wasn't anything new. Except it felt slightly different this time. Less like anticipation and more like…well, she didn't have a word for it. Something adjacent to the feeling of walking into a room and knowing something had been moved without being able to identify what. That was the best way she could think about it to herself.

Harper shook it all off. "Oh, you know Cece," she said, glancing back at Warren with a small smile. "She's already got opinions about all the tourists coming in."

Warren nodded to himself as he listened. The answer sounded genuine enough, which eased some of the tension he'd been carrying beneath the surface. Still, he filed the information away. The older wolves always occupied a different corner of his thoughts, especially this close to a full moon. Age eventually stole shifting from all of them; their bodies simply stopped tolerating it. The moon never stopped calling, though, and for some that meant little more than irritability and restless nights, while others spent a week feeling like they'd been dragged through the woods behind a truck. The worst he’d seen of it had been pneumonia-type symptoms; Ralph had passed in his sleep, and that had been a rough time. Cece had always been tough though, but that never stopped him from worrying.

A quiet chuckle rumbled from his chest as he imagined exactly what kind of opinions Cece was sharing about the incoming tourists. He could practically hear them. "I'm sure she does," he said, shaking his head with the fond resignation of a man who'd spent years listening to those same observations himself. Harper's hands continued arranging bags while she talked, careful and methodical, and Warren found himself relaxing slightly at the sight. The setup was in good hands. Better hands than his, honestly.

His gaze swept once over the truck bed, the crates, and the growing display before he pushed himself upright. The festival still had hours before it opened, but volunteers were beginning to trickle through town, and there were a hundred little things left to check before sunset. "Alright, I'm gonna head to the garage and make sure Old Rivers isn't asleep at the front desk," he said, amusement tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Wouldn't be a great first impression for the tourists if one of the mechanics is drooling on himself before noon."

The grin he flashed her was warm and easy as he stepped backward toward the sidewalk. Autumn leaves scraped softly across the pavement in the breeze, gathering against the curb where volunteers had already swept twice that morning. "If you need anything, just call me!" he called over his shoulder before turning down the street, hands slipping into his jacket pockets as he headed toward the garage. Even as he walked away, part of his attention remained behind with the pack, as it always did, quietly counting heads and making sure everyone was where they needed to be.

Harper watched him go until he turned the corner, then looked back at the truck.

Right. The bags.

She reached for the next crate and got back to work, the festival noise settling around her like background static. Without Warren, the space felt quieter than the actual volume of Main Street warranted. She was used to that. Warren had a way of making whatever space he occupied feel fuller than it was, which was probably part of what made him good at what he did. She pulled open the next crate. More candy. More stickers. More tiny plastic toys that would no doubt end up lost under car seats by November.

Harper was three bags in when she found the Tootsie Rolls. A whole bag of mixed flavours—vanilla, chocolate, cherry, lime—tucked into the corner beneath a stack of vampire fang party favours.

She picked them up and looked at them for a while without really meaning to.

They were Cece's thing and something Hank, if he were, might have labelled as one of the classics and had been for as long as Harper could remember for her now elderly caregiver, anyway. The bowl by the front door was always stocked with them around this time. The ones that appeared in Harper's Halloween bag every year without comment until Harper was old enough to buy her own candy and started doing the same thing back, also without comment, because that was how they communicated certain things like that to each other. She should have found this funny too, and normally she would have. Instead, Harper stood there with a bag of Tootsie Rolls in her hand and thought about Cece's face over the last few days.

It was probably nothing. Cece herself would have insisted everything was fine if asked either way, and Harper had learned a long time ago that there were some things you didn't push on, not because you didn't care but because you did. Because Cece had spent most of Harper's life teaching her that love wasn't about demanding access. It was about leaving the door open and trusting the other person to walk through when they were ready, much like Cece had done for her all those years ago.

She set the Tootsie Rolls carefully into the next bag before closing the crate.



interactions ....|.... harper, npcs............... mentions ....|.... a shit ton of npcs............... collabs ....|.... @Qia
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