enarms: (Default)
john h. watson ([personal profile] enarms) wrote2015-08-12 06:57 pm
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ic inbox



"John Watson's phone. I'm either busy or ignoring you, in which case you'll know who you are. Leave a message."

(text | voice | video | snail mail | action | honestly whatever)
prettier: (m y n e x t m i s t a k e)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-10-29 10:58 am (UTC)(link)
[Never is a strong word, John Watson. Who knows what the future for your hands and Freddie's pants may be. For now though they're discretely out of the picture, to undoubted relief on both sides.

He may try to figure out when laundry day is, though. Just to be facetious.

The thing that John finds so surprising is the simplest part of the story to Freddie. He's thinking about Cassidy, wondering if he misses Cassidy, and how the fuck that happened, and whether he really should check whether the bastard drowned at sea. He barely pays attention to what John asks. It's obvious.]


Yeah. Mostly. [How to guarantee never to see someone again: vanish. It doesn't always work, of course, no matter how far you go. Life's funny that way.] I was done with Bristol by then though, it was spent. Like London. You stay somewhere long enough and you know everyone, everything starts looking the same. But I had to go.

[Jesus, he's never even told Dean about Bristol, has he. Maybe it's the step removed that make the conversation possible now. Or, maybe it's the shots. He carefully arranges both empties and full into a circle on the bar.] Because he got into bed with me. I had someone else there, we were done for the night and he came and got in on the other side. Like it was his spot, like he owned it. So I waited for him to fall asleep and I left. Hitchhiked to Manchester at 2am. Never went back.
prettier: (o r i t s g o n n a g o)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-10-29 12:32 pm (UTC)(link)
[It was one of the least vicious holes Freddie's torn in someone's life, leaving the boy with the full rent to pay and a stranger asleep beside him. Freddie had abandoned most of his stuff though, everything that wouldn't fit in a bag, so that probably went some way toward paying for it. He doesn't think of it in terms of cruel or kind, looking back, just necessary.]

Yeah but. Complicated. Though I suppose some of that one was my fault. I knew he was getting clingy as soon as he started calling it a relationship.

[One of the least vicious holes, bringing a stranger back to fuck your way into a breakup. It should have been more painful, on both sides: Freddie would have felt better for it.

But no, it wasn't kind.]


We'll see. And you just offered me a bed at your place, you're not going to abandon me to to the fates. You could always send over a student nurse, couldn't you, if you were busy. Actually you could send one over anyway - do you think anyone at the hospital needs a new flat? Hold that thought, I really need a piss.

[He's gone, then, incredibly nimble through the crowd for someone with his evening's alcohol intake packed away. His speech has been slowing, very gradually, for the last few minutes, the edges of his words softening, everything about him not quite so sharp. And he's not away long - easy to pick out in the shifting lights of the bar, he stops on his way back at a summons from a lanky couple slouched in a booth: a tangle of long limbs and tight outfits. He ducks his head to hear and be heard, pointing between them and, at one point, reaching to check the watch on someone elses wrist.

John's pointed at, too, by one of the pair, and Freddie glances across like he's forgotten the man exists, before shaking his head with vehement denial.

It's a couple of minutes, then, before he comes back to claim his barstool, stretching and he climbs back onto it, languid as a cat and only fractionally off his balance.]
So, student nurses. There has to be someone at the hospital you think you could get unprofessional with.
prettier: (004)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-10-29 10:37 pm (UTC)(link)
[Maybe John has given something away to Freddie, in terms of what he would and wouldn't do. But the truth is that Freddie would have made the same assumption about him ages ago. Since he showed up to saw through a pair of handcuffs for him, and brought pizza.

But the assumption may not be what John thinks it is. The man's a doctor and Freddie assumes no one goes into a caring career without some curious enjoyment of picking people up after falls. Duty of care he thinks the term is, and that it's code for a profession full of people who don't know how to fix their own bleeding hearts. So Freddie doesn't think this touching display is about him at all, not really. John's just a man who picks up strays. There are enough of them, and he's not creepy about it, so it's fine. He'll figure out Freddie doesn't need rescuing, in the end.

Or Freddie will vanish, one day. One of those.]


I got an offer. I said I'd be back after I walked you home.

[There's no rush, because people will wait for Freddie. He knows this just as he knows the reasons for it, and how limited to the surface of his skin they are.]
prettier: (i f t h e h i g h)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-10-30 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, that's me. If I had a coat I'd toss it over puddles.

[But he doesn't have a coat, he has two shots left and knocks them back in swift succession as an alternate guard against the cold. The drink is gradually catching at his heels. He pauses to blink his eyes back into focus, a wash of blue. John's patented flat face appears to be having no effect, because he steps down from the stool and walks around to wait.]

Unless you want to go on somewhere?

[The pre-drinking's done, John, do you want to hit a club? He almost makes the question sound serious.]
prettier: (l e a v e y o u)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-11-01 11:43 pm (UTC)(link)
[Freddie walks John just as far as the door, as expected, before curling his wrist in a flourish that indicates he can open it and go.

Then, he follows him outside. Because yes, actually, Freddie absolutely plans to walk to you your door, John. It might not be the straightest of lines, but walking is still a thing that he can do. And there's another thing he can do, too. The purpose of this exercise, perhaps.

As the chill of the October night bites at his face, he rubs his palms down his sides for warmth - then holds one out for John to take.]


Come on, then. Your place or the all-night rave up the road.
prettier: (w e l l t a k e t h i s)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-11-02 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
[Profitable is exactly the quality that Freddie intends John to focus on. He needs to touch someone or he'll be here until he's dust. Might as well be Freddie. Just his hand. He's touched him up in more intimate places for stranger reasons, after all. And while Freddie had expected some kind of protest or query, he doesn't push the fact that there's not.

Ignoring it's fine. He keeps his fingers carefully threaded with John's and - for once - lets him lead. Though, he's guessed it won't be the rave.

Letting his feet take him places is most of how Freddie lives. And the night's nice, if cold. John's walk home cuts through green spaces, where the street light's cut off by the trees, and the sudden closeness of it makes Freddie feel deeper in winter already.]


Do you reckon they do Christmas, here?
prettier: (078)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-11-05 03:30 am (UTC)(link)
[Freddie's not looking when John's focus drifts back his way. His own attention's cast downwards, examining that unacknowledged point where their fingers lock. It's nothing meaningful, just somewhere else to look other than into whatever private expression John might have harboured as he spoke.

Not that he'd shy away from that, ordinarily. His attention can be unflinching enough to make the other person blink first but. There was enough given away in John's voice. The dip of Freddie's chin keeps his own thoughts shadowed, though he pulls in a quick breath and lifts a shrugged shoulder at the question.]


Yeah, I suppose. Used to be. Parts of it anyway. The music can go to fuck after about the second week of November, I had enough of carols in the school choir - don't.

[Don't you fucking laugh John Watson, yes he was a chorister in the days before he developed a dismissive attitude to anything resembling organised 'joining in'.]

So not... all that shit. [It's not quite as fondly nostalgic as John's reminiscences, clearly. And there's no personal memory offered. Christmas was a conflicted thing in the Baxter household, and has been more so in the years he's avoided anything resembling home comforts. But he misses it, sometimes. Even if he's not so much missing what was, as what was supposed to be.

He draws in another breath, a pause for thought.]
I like the build up. Lights in the dark and that. I was just thinking they could light up these trees.
prettier: (104)

[personal profile] prettier 2015-11-08 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)
[Yes, yes, school choir. He was on the athletics team until A levels, too: first place for the 200 metres at the Greater Manchester Schools Cup. He wasn't a bad student, at one time. Except, you know, in the legal sense.

Christmas, though. It's no longer a family affair (since he's been back in the North he's appeased his mother with a brief, wary morning visit, eyeing presents for people he doesn't want to see and dropping off none in return for the ones he takes: minimum wage, sorry.). But the afternoons have belonged to him and the small community of displaced people he's somehow found - in London, then in Bristol, now Manchester again. They change, the names and faces, but the sentiments the same.

And what's Eudio, if not a community of the displaced.]


I'm not going to talk to the mayor, Christ. [He casually takes the founder of the festival's name in vain. No, he's not going to talk to anyone. Thinking something might be nice is entirely different to making a public effort about it. He clicks his tongue.] That's a slippery slope. Next I'd be writing strongly worded letters to the Times and actually commenting in internet comment sections. Before you know it I'd be keeping a blog.