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#Hank the Cowdog
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⚠️Vote for whomever YOU DO NOT KNOW⚠️‼️
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tequitoclown · 1 month
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HANK THE COWDOG READER AS A CHILD 🤝
do yoh still have the plushie?
AAAA I dug through my collection and I think I put him in a storage box! I know I still have him somewhere!
There was some sort of fanclub sign-up back in the day with him where I got the plushie and a little CD of them reading parts of the books. If I do find my plushie I'll let you know but here's what it looks like!
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[Image ID: A picture of a Hank The Cowdog plushie. It has brown, curly fur with a small black nose and angry, plastic eyes. ./End ID]
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pizza-feverdream · 5 months
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You're cool but you'll never be as cool as my parents (they're going to dinner with the author of hank the cowdog)
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soovermyself · 1 year
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The family is reunited in London. ❤️
What a sweet sweet boy 🥰
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bktoons · 1 year
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Here is a art gift for the author of Hank the Cowdog, John R Erickson for his 80th birthday.
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carriagelamp · 2 years
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The books I read while clinging to sanity by my fingertips. I didn't get enough read during either month to warrant their own posts, I was just too busy and way too stressed, so here's my November and December reads combined.
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The Animal Rescue Agency: Cast File: Little Claws
I’ve been on an Eliot Schrefer kick, though so far I haven’t read anything that topped Queer Ducks for me. This was a very cute youth novel about the dashing Esquire Fox, who runs the Animal Rescue Agency, who are sworn to help any animal in need. In this first case, Esquire — and her fussy rooster friend, Mr Pepper — find themselves adventuring out into the arctic to rescue a baby polar bear from a sinister poacher.
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The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
I’ve seen this book celebrated but didn’t really know much about it. I bought it on a whim, wanting something cosy to read, and it delivered. It’s a collection of little passages that form a loose narrative, and is centred around being a positive, uplifting view of life. It occasionally feels a little trite, but ultimately if you’re willing to take it for what it is without being overly critical, it was a very charming experience. It has an old-fashioned Winnie-the-Pooh vibe, and the artistry of each page is lovely, so combining that with very gentle and loving affirmations it makes a nice book to sit under a blanket and read on a rainy day.
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Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
My mom found her old, original copy of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang from when she was a kid, and since this was something I had been meaning to read for years I decided now was the time. You can definitely see Ian Fleming’s fingerprints all over it — who doesn’t love a cool, gadget-y, semi-sentient car in a battle against horrible mobsters? Add some explosions, a bit of flying, and a sweet shop theft, it really is a fun little adventure. Very different from the film, but both are good in their own unique ways.
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A Christmas Carol
I love reading a Christmas novel in December but it was way too busy for me to do anything new or complex this year, so I decided to reread A Christmas Carol. You really can’t go wrong with it, Dicken’s turns of phrase and the way he portrays humanity is wonderful and it just pulls you right in. It’s such a quick, fun read that I really do recommend anyone who enjoys the films to give it a try — it’s not as intimidating as it might seem.
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Failed Princesses v6
Finally, the last volume of the series! It was very overdramatic but in a quintessentially shoujo way. If you’ve ever wanted an almost cliche shoujo, but with lesbians, then this is the series for you. It starts with two very different girls — a prep and a nerd, essentially — finding themselves pushed together and slowly developing a friendship as they try to understand the other’s point of view and way of living life. As the series progresses, so do their feelings for one another.
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Fortunately, the Milk
An absolutely hilarious novella about a father and his excuses for being a little late getting home from the shop with the milk his kids need for breakfast. Obviously it’s not because he got chatting with a friend, no, he was definitely dedicatedly on his way home, absolutely determined to save his children’s milk-less breakfast, only to be abducted by aliens… and it gets sillier from there. A very fast, very adorable read; it had me grinning the whole way through.
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The Original Adventures of Hank the Cowdog
This was a series I remember loving as a kid but haven’t seen since. I stumbled across the first book again and decided to see if it stood up to what I remembered. In some ways it very much did! It’s about Hank, a cowdog who takes his job as Head Of Ranch Security very seriously… but unfortunately does have the intelligence of an average dog and more often than not gets himself into a lot of fuss and bother. It’s a fun mystery adventure, written to mimic a jaded private eye and the humour that a child might miss comes through for any adults reading it. Unfortunately, they’re portrayal of First Nations oh, sorry, I mean coyotes, is seriously very, very uncomfy. Like, deeply racist. So… probably wouldn’t recommend, leave it as a childhood memory.
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Nintendo Adventure Books: Leaping Lizards
My brother has an old copy of a Nintendo choose your own adventure book so we decided to sit down and play it over the holidays. Written in the Super Mario Bros 3 era, this book is just completely buckwild, and the results of your choices are completely bizarre. Did it make sense? No. Was it well written? Also no. Did we laugh a lot while reading it though? Yes, it was a blast.
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Orphaned
More Eliot Schrefer. This story is about a young gorilla named Snub, who lived back in prehistoric Africa and had never seen a human before… until catastrophe strikes and she finds herself separated from her family and forced to care for her little brother as these strange human creatures stalk the trees. But when Snub sees the humans violently cast out one of their own, she has a challenging decision to make. Schrefer really seems to know what he’s talking about when it comes to animals, and I like how this book is handled. It’s not a “talking animal” book, and he does a great job of portraying the world as a young gorilla like Snub might perceive it.
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My Father’s Dragon
It’s been turned into a Netflix film, so of course I had to go find the book before watching the movie. The book was charming, and had that very classic 1940s kidlit vibe. Did not bother explaining any of the weirdness, just a had a fun time taking you on an adventure to Wild Island, where the narrator’s father sets about with only his cunning and a strange mishmash of supplies to try to rescue a young dragon who had been enslaved by the other animals.
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Prince of Song & Sea
I was hesitant about this book — I was never a huge Little Mermaid fan and every Disney prequel, sequel, triquel is wearing on me — but I’m pretty much willing to follow Linsey Miller wherever she intends to go. And I was pleased that I did. This book focuses on the story of Disney’s Little Mermaid as told from Prince Eric’s point of view, but with a bunch of new world building and twists built into it. In this version, Ursula is a much more pervasive and threatening force, and Eric has to figure out how to protect his little kingdom from encroaching threats, fend off the increasing pirate threat, and deal with his own curse that is related to his mother’s early death. Honestly, my main complaint is that it is inherently Disney. The weakest parts of the book came from Miller’s interesting characters and lore bump up against the “pre-rendered” Disney scenes — they didn’t always mesh that well and it left me floundering occasionally. Honestly, it made me wish this was just a pure re-imagining without the movie baggage at all. But! I can’t fault anyone from getting that ~*Sweet Disney Money*~ and I honestly don’t think anyone could have handled this better. I enjoyed reading it.
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The Hound of the Baskervilles // The Return of Sherlock Holmes
Well, my last month has been, in a world, hell. So we’ve returned to the ultimate comfort media: Sherlock Holmes. I reread Hound and The Return of Sherlock Holmes and I’ll probably be continuing with this into the New Year because my personal hell doesn’t look like it’s gonna let up any time soon.
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thekimdelacreme · 2 years
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Read Hank the Cowdog 77: The Case of the Lost Camp
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*brandon sanderson creating the character of wayne*: what if hank the cowdog had a drinking problem
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ruby-white-rabbit · 5 months
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RELIENT K MENTION you continue to be the mutual of all time
I don't know how long this has been hiding in my box but YES MUTUAL TIME LETS GOOOO
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agentsterling · 2 months
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@liesforaliving
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"Must have been a pretty good lucky punch."
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I love people who give off certain expectations, and then completely contradict them. The best way I can think of to explain it is, "The canon material feels OOC."
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toournextadventure · 3 months
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our little secret pt.vi
Summary: Life has a funny way of coming back around. Maybe, for the first time, it's actually going to come back around for the better.
Word Count: 10.9k Warnings: swearing, homophobia, HIV/Aids crisis, religious trauma, excessive smoking Pairing: Lorraine Day x Fem!Reader (Masterlist)
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The sun was just starting to rise by the time you finished letting the cattle into the field. Fall was coming in nicely, and the spring calves had more than come into their own by that point. They were rather mischievous at this age. They reminded you of such as they continued to butt their heads into the back of your legs every chance they got.
Adorable little bastards.
The crops surrounding the small gathering of buildings were looking pretty damn good, if you said so yourself. You let your fingers trail over a few peas as you squatted down to look for pests. They were almost ready to harvest. Not too much longer and it would be market season, and with any luck you would have enough harvest to make a little more to put back.
As you stood up, you picked two pods off the vine. One went straight into your mouth. The crunch was superb. Definitely ready. You tossed the other pod to Hank, who was lying in his spot on the porch, more than ready to start sunbathing. He was a useless cowdog, but you’d be damned if you didn’t love him.
“You’re doin’ great, buddy,” you said softly. He continued to crunch on the pea pod as you scratched behind his ear and walked inside.
Based on the noise echoing through the log cabin, everyone was already in the kitchen. Good, you wouldn’t have to chase them down. Not that you had to do that much anymore, everyone had fallen into a rather comfortable rhythm. A schedule, if you will. A routine fit for the veterans you now called your family.
“Thank god,” Jane sighed as you walked through the doorway into the kitchen. “Roy’s burning breakfast.”
“Course he is,” you mumbled.
“I’m not burning anything,” Roy called back. He still stepped aside without protest when you walked up beside him.
“Yet,” you said with a raised brow.
“Morning,” was all he said in reply before walking back to sit at the long kitchen table.
The whole crew was already up and ready to go while you finished saving breakfast. A wonderful array of eggs, bacon, sausage, and… well, whatever they could get out of a can. For some unknown reason - it wasn’t entirely unknown, just unconfirmed - they made it a habit to steal cans from an old military warehouse not too far away. They’d grab whatever they could carry, come back, and barter them amongst each other until their next run.
You weren’t sure why they didn’t just share, considering they all lived in the same place.
“Are you working today?” Greenback asked from where he was sitting on one of the counters.
“Yes,” you said with a nod. You turned and gave him The Look, as they all dubbed it. “Which means I can’t bail you out today. So unless you want to spend the night in jail,” you look back down, “don’t get arrested again.”
“Yes mom,” he mocked. “You don’t have to remind me every day.”
“Sure she does,” Hippie said. Unlike the others, he was waiting patiently for breakfast. “She didn’t remind you last week. Remember what happened?”
There was an awkward silence. You bit your lip to keep from laughing because you certainly remembered. So had your savings, quite frankly. And he was paying you back for it dollar by dollar, so he remembered too.
“I got arrested,” Greenback finally answered, so quietly it was almost inaudible.
“So maybe she does need to tell you,” Hippie said.
“Now listen here-”
-the noise of their argument died out. It was a skill you had learned after only a year of being there. All of them were wild, constantly arguing and occasionally devolving into screaming. Terrifying at first, considering each of them had killed someone at least once in their lives. Now you knew better.
They just needed someone to care.
“Here.”
Out of the corner of your eye, Roy held out a cigarette. You mouthed a silent “thank you” before taking it, waiting patiently for him to flick his lighter open. Smoking was a nasty habit. Yet, when everyone around you imbibed, it was easy enough to fall into it with them. In a strange twist of fate, Camels were preferred over Marlboros. Peculiar.
Disgusting.
“Going to the hospital this morning?” Roy asked.
You nodded and exhaled the ashy smoke. “Wanna go with me?”
He was already shaking his head. “Those are your people, not mine,” he grumbled before leaning back against the counter and crossing his arms.
“Some are vets,” you said, looking at him with a raised brow. “Just cause you don’t claim ‘em don’t mean they’re not yours.”
“Tell that to our old man,” Roy said, all joking aside.
“Yeah, well.” You exhaled the last cloud of smoke before you put the cigarette out on one of the many trays around the house. “I got a few other things I’d rather say to him.”
“You and me both,” he said, patting your shoulder and pushing away from the counter with his hip.
He was doing better, you thought as you told everyone breakfast was finally ready. He was much better. Maybe it had something to do with being around a bunch of other people who understood. Everyone in the compound - or commune, as Hippie called it - except you had been in Vietnam. They knew each other’s struggles and fears. As much as your daddy hated the term, it was everyone’s safe space.
“Hey Preacher, you’ll bail me out if I get arrested tomorrow, right?”
And unfortunately, you were everyone’s Commune Mother. Who would’ve thought?
—---
“Morning, Richard,” you said once you saw the kind doctor behind the desk.
“Good morning, Preacher,” he said with a smile that hid behind his mustache. “I was hoping to see you this morning.”
You smiled to yourself and gripped your bag tighter. Dr. Richard was a sweet man, not too different from Huck. If Huck was closer to your father’s age than yours, that was. His smile wasn’t as crooked, but you supposed some would find it attractive.
Not you. But someone.
“Who do you have for me this mornin’?” You asked, instinctively leaning over the counter.
You weren’t supposed to, you knew it was against policy. Richard had said it was something against patient privacy or something like that. The first few times, just the thought of violating someone’s privacy was enough to send you home. The last thing you wanted to do was read something they didn’t want you to. You knew that better than most.
Now though? Oh, now they could tell you to your face if they wanted you to back off.
The long list of names was almost as recognisable as the Bible itself. You visited a very specific type of patient. A type that had gotten you ostracised your first few months. You knew every single patient that came in, and every single one that Robert - you adamantly refused to call him daddy anymore - condemned to hell. If they were going to hell, you were going with them.
“Here we go,” Richard said, pulling you out of your thoughts. “Mr. Baker.”
You leaned further across the table, almost touching foreheads with Richard. Mr. Baker was new, if you remembered correctly. In his 50s, grumpy, determined the world was out to get him. Maybe it was, you knew the feeling. Hell, the world had been out to get you. It wasn’t too far-fetched to believe it might be the same for him.
“He gonna throw anything at me?” You asked as you finally dropped back to the floor.
“He’s been advised not to,” Richard said with a sigh.
“Oh thank the lord, he’s been advised.”
“I’m sure he’ll behave,” he said. His smile was always nice. Kind.
“I’ll go see,” you said. You pushed yourself away from the desk but didn’t get very far before you heard Richard call after you.
“Can I buy you dinner tonight?”
You looked at him for a moment, your head tilted. This wasn’t a new question. In fact, he asked nearly every week, if memory served you right. Part of you wanted to tell him yes, just once. Just once to see if you could change. It would certainly make the world a lot easier to deal with.
It wouldn’t be fair to him.
“I have to work,” you said with a soft smile. He kept getting smaller as you walked backwards.
“How about a drink?” He leaned forward on the desk.
Oh, he was charming. And yet, you still felt nothing but a platonic admiration for him. Nothing you did would “fix” you. If you couldn’t fall for someone who was inarguably a perfect match, with the only issue being he was a man? Nothing would work. And for the life of you, you still couldn’t decide if it was because you were broken?
Or perhaps nothing was wrong with you at all.
“Ask me again next week,” you told him.
“Will you say yes?” He asked as he stood up straight. It was the same old song and dance, week after week. A routine. Comfort.
“No,” you said with a cheeky grin. You managed to see Richard shake his head and smile to himself before you turned around and continued your walk through the hospital halls.
As unusual as it sounded, there was something comforting about the hospital. Yes, it was filled with disease and death and despair. An unfortunate consequence of the times. But with all the time you had spent between the walls, you felt at home. No one judged; they didn’t have the time nor capacity. You felt welcome. Wanted.
Mr. Baker’s door wasn’t hard to find; you knew the layout like the back of your hand. Though you would admit, you didn’t think you had been to that particular room before. Not that it mattered, they were all the same. At least it would be easy enough to find for next time.
You knocked on the door three times, gave it a moment, and walked in.
“Good morning, Mr. Baker, I-”
“-Get out of my fucking room,” he said before you could even close the door. “I don’t want some fucking priest in here.”
Your mouth snapped shut. In your mind, you checked off the boxes as you studied him. Grumpy? Judging by the set of his mouth, check. Older? His balding head of grey hair was a check. Sick? Well, he was in the hospital, so check. Scared?
Check.
“Good thing I’m not a priest,” you said slowly. He could hear perfectly well, but you didn’t want to make him more angry. A skill you had learned rather quickly.
“I can see a bible thumper from a mile away,” he continued. “It’s sticking out of your damn bag.”
Slowly, you looked down. Damn. He was right.
“I’m not a bible thumper, Mr. Baker,” you tried to say.
“If you’re not some priest, what are you?”
“Would you like my name?” You asked.
“I don’t give a fuck what your name is.” He shook his head. “I want to know what you are.”
“What do you want me to be?” You asked as you took a step further into the room.
“You some kinda prostitute or something?” He asked. You finally noticed his thick Yankee accent.
“Is that what you want me to be?” You asked again, taking another step.
He opened and shut his mouth twice before looking away from you. The very first few weeks you had started coming to the hospital, you remembered what everyone had told you. They’re like cornered animals. You had initially taken offense at the sentiment. They were scared, and the staff had the nerve to compare them to animals?
Until you remembered when you were cornered. You had been just as angry, just as scared, and just as vicious. Those first few months alone without the three people you knew would have protected you. Those were the most terrifying months of your life. Each time someone looked at you, fear raced through your veins. Did they know? Would they try to kill you too, just for the crime of existing? Were they angels, coming to personally drag you to hell for the sin of love?
Only once you had someone who cared did you feel any sort of comfort in your skin. Roy and his entire gang would fight heaven and hell for you. They didn’t care who you loved, they just cared that you were safe. That you were loved, unconditionally. It wasn’t a feeling you were accustomed to.
Everyone you visited in the hospital just wanted to be loved, not feared or ridiculed.
You took another step closer.
“If you want me to leave, I will,” you said softly. “Just say the word.”
Mr. Baker continued to look out the window. It didn’t feel right to stay if he didn’t want you, and you wouldn’t blame him. You waited a few more seconds in awkward silence before nodding slowly to yourself. He didn’t want you there, and that was okay. You backed up and turned to face the door. It was alright, you could always try again next-
“-you can stay.” You smiled to yourself while still facing the door. “Since you’re already here.”
It was a lovely visit with Mr. Baker. He had been a lawyer, back before the epidemic scandal. Hell, he had been a lawyer less than a week ago. All until he had gotten too sick, and got fired for being gay. He complained about his wife leaving him, but he didn’t seem all that upset by it. You could understand.
“If you’re not a priest,” Mr. Baker said, “why carry that damn book?”
“Cause it used to bring me comfort,” you said as you flipped aimlessly through the Bible. “It’s the last thing I have of home.”
“You get excommunicated?” He asked.
You turned and gave him a sad smile. “Somethin’ like that.”
“Do you feel free yet?”
No. Not entirely, at least. That feeling of guilt that had weighed on you throughout your entire adult life had eased, but you weren’t free. Free would be living with Lorraine, and Beau and Huck. Not a care in the world, just living off together and doing whatever you all wished. Yeah. Yeah, that was freedom.
“Not yet,” you finally answered.
Mr. Baker chuckled humourlessly. “That’s what I thought.”
You didn’t stay much longer. He made you promise to come back next week. Well, he didn’t so much make you promise, it was more like you can come back, if you want. But you had been around enough people to know what that meant, so you said you’d come back.
Without your bible, of course, that was what he emphasised.
“Hey Mama.”
You smiled at the words. “Hey baby.” Quietly, you closed the door behind you. “How are you today?”
Eric smiled back at you. “Better and better each day.”
You both knew it was a lie. From what Richard had patiently described to you, Eric was at most a few months away from dying. No more than a boy at only 19, he was going to die without any of his family around. All because they thought he was gay. Perhaps that was why he had attached himself to you as quickly as he had; there was no time to be picky.
“Come sit with me,” he said as he patted the spot beside him.
Without hesitation, you placed your bag at the end of the bed and crawled in with him. The television was situated directly in front of the bed, on a rolling cart that you often found yourself moving. It was some western, but you couldn’t be bothered to know which one. All knowledge of westerns had been forcibly shoved out of your mind the moment you had been displaced.
If anyone from home would have seen you at that moment, they would have keeled over. Not only were you in bed with a suspected gay boy, but one with AIDS? The devil’s disease? The thought of their disgust alone was enough to warm your soul. You hoped they would find out, and you hoped it killed them.
You wouldn’t bother going to their funerals.
“You bring the goods?” Eric asked.
You were already nodding your head as you leaned forward to grab your bag. “If you tell anyone I got these for you, I’ll never buy them again.”
“My mouth is shut,” he said.
He watched with hungry eyes as you pulled out the contraband. The first was a pack of cigarettes; Lucky Strikes. Eric claimed he liked them for the flavour. You knew it was because his grandfather had smoked them during the second world war. Second was a pack of baseball cards, unopened, directly from the corner store a few blocks away. Rumour had it they carried the best cards around.
Third was a Playboy, which you quickly handed over so you wouldn’t have to touch it anymore.
“Oh, you’re the best,” he mumbled to himself as he ripped open the pack of baseball cards with his teeth. “Bet there’s something special in here.”
“I hope there is,” you said with a barely concealed laugh.
While he pulled the cards out, he handed the pack of smokes to you. As much as you knew better, it had become a nice little routine of yours. You would open the smokes and get one started for both you and him. He would look through the cards and show you the “good ones,” going on about every little detail. Once your cigarettes were nothing more than a filter, you would sit back, enjoy a bit of company, and watch whatever you could find on the television.
“Oh this is amazing, wanna hear about it?” He asked, but he didn’t wait for an answer before starting talking.
You slipped the light cigarette into his mouth while he talked. His enthusiasm was contagious. You had not the slightest idea who he was even talking about, but even you were impressed with the person’s statistics. Not enough to remember any of it, but that didn’t really matter.
Eric carried on, and you just sat there and watched him. He reminded you of Jimmy. Young, eager, excited about the little things. It was good to be young. Good to be excited about things that others would consider silly or inconsequential. Maybe that was why you had such a soft spot for him. You might not have had Jimmy, but you had someone that gave you hope in the world.
It wasn’t enough. But it would do.
“Oh shit,” Eric said in a hushed voice. You looked down to see the Playboy in his hands. “They’ve got Miss Minx in here.”
Your brows pulled together as you looked down at the magazine. Admittedly, you couldn’t have cared less about the issue. Your small window into the world of smut had closed that night Lorraine had left. It didn’t have anything to do with you anymore and, quite frankly, perhaps it was all for the better.
But nothing could have prepared you to see a full print of Maxine in a Playboy.
“She made it,” you whispered to yourself with a small smile. “The crazy bitch made it.”
“What do you mean?” Eric asked. His eyes grew wide as he looked up at you. “Wait, did you know her?”
“Yeah,” you said softly. “Her and her whole crew.”
“You knew her early stuff?” He asked excitedly. His body turned to face you.
You nodded.
“Like Bobby-Lynne?”
Another nod.
“And Jackson Hole?”
And another.
“And-”
“-Yes, I knew them all,” you interrupted. 
You couldn’t hear her name coming from someone else’s lips. It would have been sinful to speak of the woman you would have worshipped day and night. Something about hearing someone else talk about her felt wrong. Blasphemous even. It was better to let sleeping dogs lie.
At least out loud.
“Think you can get me an autograph?” Eric asked, still as enthusiastic as ever. “It can be my, uh,” he exhaled harshly. “What’s it called,” he mumbled. His eyes lit up before he looked at you again. “That Make A Wish thing.”
“Ain’t that for kids with cancer?” You asked.
“Maybe,” he said with a shrug. “But I’m a kid with AIDS, so I think I count.”
“Don’t think it works that way, baby,” you chuckled.
“Just one autograph,” he begged. “I won’t ever shoot up again, I promise.”
“You already can’t shoot up again,” you said not unkindly. “That’s what got you here in the first place.”
“Oh come on, please?”
You sighed and shook your head. You always had been a sucker for big brown eyes.
“I’ll see what I can do,” you said dejectedly.
The rest of the visit went exactly as it always did. Eric talked non stop about everything that crossed his mind, and you listened. From what he had been “forced” to eat last night, to what he was looking forward to you bringing next week. He very much wanted a burger from your bar. You couldn’t argue; it was the most sensible thing he had asked for in months.
“Don’t get in trouble before I come back,” you told him as you walked to the door. It was past time for work.
“I promise on my life,” he said with a smile that showed off the purple lesions on his gums. “Love you, Mama!”
“Love you too, baby,” you called out, shooting him one last smile before leaving the room.
The first tear fell before the door clicked shut.
With a shake of your head, you made your way out of the hospital. Richard gave you a quick goodbye, and you were off to work. It was some sleazy gay bar on the outside of town. You knew better than to try and take a cab out there. If Roy or Jane couldn’t grab you from the hospital, you would just walk the 30 minutes to get there. Safety first.
Unfortunately, it was far too hot for the walk. It was nothing you weren’t used to, but that didn’t make it enjoyable. Sweat was dripping into your eyes and keeping your shirt stuck to your back by the time you finally walked through the doors of the bar. Thankfully you kept a change of clothes in the back.
“Thank god,” Jessie groaned when you came back to the bar in much cleaner clothes. “I was about to panic.”
“Don’t be a dick,” you whispered in his direction as you smiled at the man on the other side of the bar.
“Is your doctor coming in tonight?” He asked with far too much excitement.
“Go serve your drinks, pretty boy,” you told him before turning back around to start working.
There was something surprisingly enjoyable about working at a bar. Or perhaps it was technically called a club, you weren’t entirely sure. Regardless, you loved it. It was freeing in a way. No one expected you to act a certain way, or pretend to be something you weren’t. You could just laugh, have fun, and genuinely thrive.
“Can I buy you that drink now?”
You smiled to yourself before sitting on the other side of the table. Richard had made himself at home - as he usually did when you worked - and was still nursing his singular drink. His usual doctor’s coat had long been abandoned, instead replaced by a flowery shirt and some cargo shorts. Something that made him stick out tremendously among the group of gay men and women.
“Not on my break,” you told him.
“How about a smoke?” He asked, pulling out a fresh pack of Camels out of his shirt pocket. With skilled fingers, he opened it and pulled a single cigarette out.
“Oh, you’re my hero,” you mumbled, leaning forward to wrap your lips around what he had dubbed the “cancer stick.”
“Those are bad for you, you know,” he said even as he lit it for you and slid the pack and lighter across the table.
“I stopped caring about that a long time ago, Rich,” you said.
As the patrons continued to mill about and enjoy their night, you sat quietly with Richard. He really was a good man, and a part of you wished you could love him. Hell, he had helped you through a lot, the least you could do was give him the one thing he wanted. If you had any belief that you were capable of it, you would have taken him up on his offer long ago.
But you couldn’t in good conscience marry a man that you couldn’t properly appreciate. It wouldn’t have been fair to him. You had watched Lorraine go down that road with RJ, and it hadn’t gone well. She was miserable, doubtless, he had picked up on it as well, and neither one ended up being happy. That was no way to live.
You put out the smouldering cigarette on the ashtray and immediately lit another. That train of thought was not going to end well. You hadn’t painstakingly forced yourself to keep going just to end up thinking too hard one night at work. No, you simply needed to feel the sticky burn at the back of your throat a few more times.
“Is Roy taking you home tonight?” Richard asked.
You hummed affirmative. “No need to play taxi cab,” you teased.
“Will you be back in the hospital soon?” You nodded again. “The men love you.”
“How ironic,” you said with a humourless laugh. “If we had loved each other to begin with, all our lives would’ve been different.”
“Don’t be cynical,” Richard said. He reached out and placed his hand on top of yours. It was warm. Soft. So very different from Beau’s.
You thought for a second before answering. “What do you want me to be?”
“Don’t start that,” he said, quickly pulling his hand back. You couldn’t help smiling at him. “That trick doesn’t work on me, sweetheart.”
“You’re right, I’m sorry,” you said. Another inhale, another ache in the back of your throat, another satisfying cloud of smoke. “Jessie said I need to quit usin’ humour to cope.”
“He’s not wrong,” Richard said. His voice was soft over the sound of the music playing in the bar. “Do you need to talk about it?”
He really was sweet, you thought. Truly a shame.
“I’m alright, Rich,” you said. “Really.”
“I know, just,” he sighed. “I know we aren’t compatible, but I do care for you.” He, too, had irresistible big brown eyes. “I’m not going anywhere.”
You didn’t know what to say. It was all entirely too much, and you were still feeling emotional from hanging out with Eric earlier. The last thing you needed was for Richard to get emotional on you. If you were being honest with yourself, you needed him to mind his own business.
“You need to go home,” you said with a smile. It was a poor attempt at teasing. “Jessie works tonight.”
“Oh shit,” Richard mumbled. His back straightened and he looked around frantically. “Yeah, I had better go.”
“You should say yes sometime,” you said as you both stood up from the table. “You’d make his year.”
His eyes got big before he undoubtedly noticed the crinkle by your eyes. “I couldn’t dare lead him on like that.”
“Go home, Rich,” you laughed.
You leaned up on your toes to press a quick kiss to his cheek. It was scratchy; he needed to shave again. Roy had told you not to give the man hope, but you weren’t. From the beginning, you had been very clear with him where you stood, and he had never pushed you for a different answer. A kiss on the cheek was nothing more than kindness.
“Get home safe, sweetheart,” he said. “I’ll see you later.”
You bid him goodbye and walked back to the bar. If you put all your attention into work, it wouldn’t be long before you closed and you could go home. Tomorrow would be calm until you had to go back to work later that evening. There should be plenty of time to start harvesting crops and getting everyone set up for the next few weeks.
“I’ll get that man to love me one day,” Jessie said. You followed his line of sight to see Richard walking out the door.
“Sorry, Jess,” you said with a shrug, “but I don’t think he’ll budge.”
“Then he can tell me no himself,” he said. “I can wait.”
“You’re gonna get you in trouble one day,” you said as you started preparing a drink for one of the usuals that had just walked in the door.
“So are you,” he said from his spot beside you. “Someone was asking for you while you were with Doctor Handsome.”
You slid the drink across the bar. “And what did you say?”
“We don’t give out that information,” he repeated like he had so many times before. “I know the rules, I’m no amateur.”
You hummed in acknowledgment as you continued working. Who could have come asking for you? Perhaps it was one of the Vets; Jessie didn’t know all of them. Vulture was quite the intimidating character, maybe it had been him. He was the least likely of the crew to remember your work schedule. Yeah, it was probably him.
The rest of the night was reasonably quiet. Those were some of your favourite nights. There were fewer expectations and interactions. You could simply do your job, get paid, and go home. No stress, no need to overthink, nothing. It was wonderful.
Like clockwork, Roy walked into the bar after everyone had left and you were finishing cleaning. He sat down at the bar, resting his arms on the cool wood. Without stopping your movements, you slid the pristine pack of cigarettes over to him, which he swiftly opened and lit.
“How was the hospital?” Roy asked.
You leaned forward so he could place a smoke between your lips. “Same as always,” you said. “Eric’s magazine had Maxine in it.”
An exceptionally tough stain captured your attention. Having something to focus on was nice, you didn’t want to think about seeing Maxine. In fact, you already regretted bringing it up. You knew Roy had liked her too, even though he had only met her once or twice. It wasn’t fair to either one of you for you to have brought it up.
“Well hello, Roy,” Jessie said as he sidled up next to you.
“Hello, Jessie,” Roy said politely. And nothing more than polite.
“You ever going to party with us?” Jessie asked. He was not helping you clean. “I think you would be good for business.”
“It ain’t really my scene,” Roy said with an unsure smile.
“It could be,” Jessie said. The flirt.
You quickly shoved your hand towel into Jessie’s hands. “Think you can finish closin’ on your own?”
Roy took that as his sign to head out, telling Jessie a short “good night” before heading to the truck waiting on the street. You loved Jessie to death, you really did, but he was going to get himself into a world of hurt if he didn’t stop. Roy wasn’t homophobic by any means, but the man still wasn’t consistently stable. He was not the one to play with.
“Quit flirtin’ with my brother,” you hissed as you grabbed your Camels, lighter, and cash tips. “And my doctor.”
“Quit bringing handsome men to the bar,” Jessie called after you. “It’s not fair, you know.”
“Night Jessie,” you shouted. He answered as the doors swung closed behind you.
If there was one thing you could say about Roy’s truck, it was that the interior was as pristine as a farmer’s truck could get. Everything was in its place, and everything had a place. The car lighter was always ready, and he kept one pack each of three different smokes in the center bucket. In the glovebox was his pistol and a few spare rounds in an unmarked cardboard box.
“You didn’t share a cigarette with that boy earlier, did you?” Roy asked once he pulled off onto the main road to get back out to the compound.
“No, Roy, I ain’t stupid,” you huffed. “I lit his, then got my own.”
“Don’t get testy,” he defended quickly, “I just don’t want you gettin’ sick too.”
“Oh I’m fine,” you mumbled more to yourself before looking out the window.
It was because he cared, you reminded yourself. Maybe a bit too much, but he did. Even though you both considered the other Vets your family, you still only had each other. No one understood you like he did, and vice versa. You wouldn’t be who you were without him, and he was protective to a fault.
That did not mean you had to enjoy his line of questioning.
“Make any new friends?” He asked after a bit of awkward silence.
You told him all about Mr. Baker; not that there was much to say yet. He listened intently, nodding along with your tale and mumbling encouragement when appropriate. It was a pretty one-sided conversation, but that didn’t matter. He listened, and you got to say a bit. Hell, he even laughed when you complained that Mr. Baker had called you a priest.
“Hey Roy.” You waited until he grunted for you to continue. “Did you ever think maybe Robert was wrong? With his preachin’?”
He laughed. A big laugh, one that would put anyone else to shame. It caught you off guard and you frowned at him even though he was focused on the road. He didn’t need to be so rude.
“I knew he was wrong the day I was drafted,” he said after calming down. “Why d’you ask?”
You looked down at the pieces of paper you were slowly picking off the pack of Marlboros in your hand.
“I’ve just been thinkin’ about it lately,” you said with a shrug.
“What exactly have you been thinkin’ about?” He probed.
“You think God is ashamed of us?” You asked.
When Roy was silent, your fingers pulled at one of the cigarettes in the pack. Maybe Richard was right, you needed to slow down. But with all the thoughts running through your head day and night, the last thing you were worried about was a smoke. That sounded like a problem for the future, if you ever got to it.
You exhaled smoke before continuing. “Think He saw us and decided it was easier to turn his back?” Roy was silent. “Cause He don’t talk to me anymore.” You turned to face Roy, who was still looking straight ahead. “Did I do somethin’ wrong?”
“You did nothin’ wrong,” he said quickly. If you looked closely, his knuckles were paling from his grip on the wheel.
“Just what I’ve been thinkin’ about,” you said quietly. “Sometimes I feel like I did somethin’ wrong.”
The truck pulled up to the front of the house you shared. The lights were on downstairs and in the kitchen. Hopefully Moose wasn’t drunk again. The last thing you wanted to do was deal with his nonsense so late at night. Honestly, you just wanted to go get in bed and start a new day.
“Guess we should head inside,” you mumbled.
You put the cigarette out on the heel of your boot before putting the now-cool butt in your pocket. Everyone knew better than to leave trash in Roy’s truck. But when you went to open the door, Roy’s arm reached in front of you and pushed down the lock.
“Why’d you do that?” You asked with a small laugh. “We’re already parked.”
Both of his hands stayed on the wheel. He still wasn’t looking at you. You knew the look on his face. It had never led to anything good.
“Remember when we first got here?” He asked quietly.
“What?” You asked. He didn’t move. You sighed and shook your head. “Yeah, I remember.”
“You didn’t get out of bed for two months,” he continued.
“Why are you askin’?”
He exhaled slowly. “I wrote a letter back home not long after we arrived.”
“What?” You asked incredulously.
“I didn’t leave a return address, but I wrote to Ma that we were safe,” he said.
“You never told me that,” you said.
“I didn’t want them to hear from Mr. Dylan first and think badly of you,” he said.
Finally, he turned to face you. He wore a troubled look, one you so often saw when he was having a hard day. It usually accompanied a bit of crying, perhaps some yelling, and a lot of nightmares before that look of his went away. You didn’t like that he had it again.
“A few weeks ago, I got a letter from someone,” he said. “Through the circuit.”
You vaguely remembered him explaining that to you. Some backroot way Vets were talking with each other. A system they had all created with a bunch of different towns. If you sent a letter through the circuit, some way somehow, eventually it would find who it was supposed to. You didn’t question it much since none of your Vets used it.
But only other Vets knew about it.
“Who sent you a letter?” You asked.
Roy looked at you with pathetic puppy dog eyes.
“Roy,” you said, more stern, “who sent it?”
“Jackson.”
You looked back at the house. And the silhouette of someone now standing in the window. Perhaps they were looking out, you didn’t know. You didn’t care. You knew that silhouette. Knew it like the back of your hand; better than that, actually.
With shaking hands, you put another cigarette between your lips. It took far too many tries to start the lighter, and even longer to keep it still long enough to catch a light. The smoke and ash didn’t hurt enough. It didn’t quell whatever was going on inside your chest.
“Unlock the truck, please,” you said softly.
Roy didn’t move. 
“Unlock the fuckin’ truck,” you said more forcefully.
The moment you heard the lock click, you threw the door open. Heavy boots hit the hard ground, and you gripped the door handle until you were sure you could stand on your own. The ground tilted beneath you, like a ship on the sea. Back and forth in front of your very eyes. Or maybe it was still.
You started walking away from the house. It would be a decent walk, but that was okay. Long enough for you to clear your head, get a grip on reality, and rest. You knew where to find a warm bed, and no one would do anything to you. Everyone knew not to mess with you, you had friends in high places.
“Where are you goin’?” Roy called out to you.
You took a drag of the cigarette. “I’ll stay the night at Richard’s,” you called back. You sounded pathetic. Weak. Broken.
“You ain’t just walkin’ away-”
“-why not?” You interrupted as you spun on your heels to face him. “Why can’t I just walk away?” He looked at you intensely. “That’s what we did four years ago. Why is this any different?”
“Because you could’ve died,” Roy said quickly. “When I walked in, you were about to be fuckin’ executed.”
“Better than bein’ lynched,” you said. “At least it would’ve been quick.”
“Don't act like you weren't scared.”
“I've been scared every day of my adult life,” you admitted. There was a lump in your throat. “How would you even know how I feel anyway?”
“Because,” he laughed, “none of us are stupid. You're not as good at hidin’ your feelings as you think”
You scoffed and crossed your arms over your chest. “You're full of shit.”
“Oh yeah?” He asked, standing taller. “Then how come everyone always saw you as a bigger suicide risk than me?”
You froze. 
“Yeah, now you're listening,” he continued. “You think no one talked behind your back? Even Ma would ask me if you were alright, if you and Beau were good.” He shook his head. “Everyone was worried as all get out about you.”
“If y'all were so concerned, you sure knew how to hide it,” you argued.
“What were we gonna do, Y/N?” Roy asked. “Potentially out you to the whole town? You're right, they would've lynched you outside the church.”
“I already told you, I wasn't scared of dyin’,” you said as you walked closer.
“Don't act like you gave up in that church because you weren't scared,” he said harshly. “You gave up to protect Lorraine.” His finger jabbed into your chest harshly. “If you died, no one would've ever known about her and she could've lived happily ever after. You gave up because you love her,” he practically hissed.
You took a step back. The burn of a lit cigarette inched closer to your knuckles. It was a feeling you could live with because at least it was a feeling. A better feeling than whatever Roy’s words had done to you. They were carving out your insides, scraping you off the edges until you wanted to cry and scream and hike into the woods until you couldn’t remember your own name.
“We missed Gramma’s funeral.” You shook your head. “We missed our baby brother’s wedding.” It wasn’t true. “I ain’t lettin’ you miss anything else.”
It was too much. Everything was just too much. What did he mean? Gramma had been in perfect health when you had left. Hell, you all swore she would live forever. And what about Jimmy getting married? Sure, you had expected it sooner or later, but without you?
He got married without you?
“I’ve spent four years workin’ on movin’ on, Roy,” you said. The lump in your throat only grew bigger. “I’ve worked day and night to try and live without her.”
“And look where you are, darlin’,” he said. “You still have nightmares from that damn church. And Jessie told me how many women you’ve turned down.” The cigarette butt fell from your fingers. “Think someone who’s moved on would do that?”
Damn Jessie. Damn him for talking with Roy. Though, he wasn’t wrong. Over the course of working at the bar, more than your fair share of women had asked you to dinner or to buy you a drink. They were all nice, and attractive. But you told them no time and time again because of one flaw that wasn’t their fault.
They weren’t Lorraine.
“You’ve been through some shit,” Roy said softly, and you looked up to meet his eyes. “Don’t go throwin’ away your shot at happiness.”
You wrapped your arms around your body and looked at the house. The silhouette was still in one of the windows of the living room. If you looked closer, you could see the scene you had always wished for. Holding Lorraine close, in a house you called your own, drinking coffee and watching the sunrise. No fears, no shame, just love.
It was what you wanted more than anything.
“I don’t wanna lose her again,” you whispered.
For the first time in a while, Roy smiled at you. “I promise you won’t.”
His hand rested on the small of your back before gently pushing you forward. Right, you needed to move. Okay, you could do that, you could move. All you needed to do was get to the house, right? Get to the house and get the girl. That’s what Jimmy would’ve told you. It’s what Beau and Huck would’ve told you.
Each step closer to the house forced your heart to beat harder and harder. Roy had seemed pretty confident, but what if he was wrong? What if Lorraine was there to officially end it? After all, she had been engaged to RJ. Not happily, but she had been. Without you around, what need would she have to break it off?
Oh, that wasn’t a good train of thought. Not good at all. Maybe you didn’t want to see her again. You didn’t think your heart could handle rejection, not after everything it had already been through. It would be less painful than jumping in front of the train that ran through the outskirts of town.
But what if she said yes?
Now that. That would be worth the risk.
Roy’s footsteps could be heard around the porch. There was a side door that lead to the second half of the house, the one that had originally been its own building. After everyone had knocked the middle wall down to make one house, they had still treated it as separate. That’s where the Vets stayed more often than not.
Which left you alone.
You couldn’t stay outside the door forever. Well, you could. Maybe you should. Would that really be so bad? Just sleep outside for the night, you could go find Hank’s dog house and rest. Moose had built it big enough to fit, well, a moose. Yeah, you could fit, it might be a good idea just to stay in there.
Someone shuffled around inside, and you couldn’t take it. You needed to know if it was her. You needed to know for sure, and you needed to give your heart a break. Whatever the outcome, it would bring some sort of closure. Anything was better than the limbo you had been living in.
The door creaked as you pushed it open. It pierced your heart like the splinters outside. Your palms could not have been more clammy. The floor was solid beneath you. It swayed beneath you, but at least it didn’t feel like it was falling out under your feet. That was always nice.
You faced the door as you closed it. The shuffling behind you - it was in the kitchen - came to an abrupt stop. The wooden door was rough beneath your fingers. If you scratched it, you could flake off the paint. Some scratched paint was the least of everyone’s worries in that house.
Turn around. If you could just turn around, it would be okay. Roy said it would be okay, and you trusted him. He wouldn’t lie to you, not about this. With a sigh, you let your forehead rest against the door. Come on, you just needed to turn around. Right. Something weighed heavy in your stomach. You felt sick.
One slow breath in.
Slow breath out.
A splinter pricked your finger as you pushed yourself back and turned around. You focused on that, looking down at the sliver of wood. Tired fingers picked at it, and you used it as a distraction. Work at the splinter, and get your breathing under control. Once you were ready, you could look up.
But you couldn’t wait. You had waited so long already. Within your chest, your heart was aching. Reaching out for its other half. Scratching at the confines of bones and flesh to escape and relish in its freedom once again. To drown itself in the love that it so desperately desires.
You just needed to look up.
The moment you saw those brown eyes again, you knew it was over. All the pain and suffering and rejection. The fear of being found out, or being ostracised for a love that was no different than anyone else’s. It was over once you locked eyes with her.
She looked tired. The bags underneath her eyes rivaled your own; no small feat. If she had lost weight, you wouldn’t have faulted her. You had certainly lost your fair share. It was difficult to keep yourself well fed when you didn’t see the point in continuing. You knew that well.
Should you say something to her? She was looking at you like it was expected, but what could you possibly say? A simple hello wouldn’t suffice, not after everything you had both been through. Not after you had nearly been killed. What could you say to the woman you loved? What could make up for those years apart? Those years spent denying something serious was taking place within your hearts for the sake of peace?
Turned out, all you had to do was breathe.
One inhale was all it took. Lorraine’s body slammed into you before you could do anything else, knocking all the breath out of you in one fell swoop. Her momentum carried you, and before you could steady yourself, the floor rushed up to meet your back. It should have hurt, should have stolen the breath from your lungs and ached for days to come.
But you didn’t feel anything besides her body against yours. You had forgotten how well she fit in your arms. Like you were supposed to be together, two halves of the same mould. She was warm, and soft, and her heart beat rapidly against your chest. If you listened closely, your heart was in sync with hers. Like it should have been. Like it always had been.
With your back to the floor, she couldn’t properly wrap her arms around you. But you could. Your arms wrapped around her shoulders and pulled her tighter. Her breath tickled against the hollow at the base of your neck. When you inhaled, she smelled of spring. She always smelled of spring.
“I knew I’d find you again,” Lorraine mumbled against your skin. Her lips were soft.
You didn’t know what to say, so you said nothing at all. You just pulled her tighter against you. If you could keep her where she was, it would be impossible for her to disappear. No running off to go on some film shoot, no leaving to save face with RJ. She would stay right there in your arms where she belonged.
Where she was supposed to be.
“Baby?” She whispered. You hummed in acknowledgment. “This is getting uncomfortable.”
An ache shot through your hips when you tried to move. Clearly, she was right. Your girl was always right. But you weren’t going to let her go, not so soon. Instead, you kept your arms wrapped around her and struggled into a sitting position. It was like instinct for her to maneuver herself so she could sit in your lap and rest her head between your collar and jaw.
“They said you and Roy ran off,” Lorraine said softly. Small fingers played with the buttons of your shirt. “First it was a vacation, then he kidnapped you, then y’all were dead.”
A low rumble cleared your throat. “Weren’t no vacation, that’s for sure.”
“Missing the fourth of July gave that away,” she said.
“I’m sorry,” you whispered into her hair.
“Beau lost his mind,” she continued. “Huck couldn’t even keep him calm.”
“Are they-”
“-they’re still good,” she said quickly. “Just worried about you.”
“And you?”
You knew she cared. God, you knew. But you needed to hear her say it. All your feelings had been put aside day after day because you couldn’t ruin whatever pretend lives you had on display for everyone. She needed to say it, to confirm that yes, she does love you, she did miss you, you weren’t imagining everything.
“Every day, I prayed to find you,” she said softly. “And if that wasn’t possible, then I prayed for God to just kill me.” Her breath tickled your neck. “When every beat of your heart hurts because it longs for something it can’t have, you start to wish for the worst.”
You didn’t have any sort of reply for her. What would you say? If they had all been that concerned without even knowing what had happened that night, you couldn’t in good conscience tell her the truth. I’m sorry you were worried, baby, but we left because I was almost murdered. How would that help anything? Besides, you were more than content to try and forget the whole night anyway.
In your lap, Lorraine shifted until her back was pressed against you and your hands rested in her lap. Naturally, your chin rested on her shoulder as you looked down. Her warm hands played with your own, twisting them this way and that. Gently, of course. It was then you noticed something different, and you rubbed your finger across her bare ring finger.
“I broke it off,” she said.
Hell, she didn’t need to say more. Those four words were enough to have your stomach rolling. Those shackles you had both been bound by were gone. No need to pretend you were nothing more than best friends. Friends. The word left an ashy taste in your mouth. No, you would never be her friend again.
“Was he upset?” You asked.
She was silent for a moment. “I think he saw it comin’.”
“Damn,” you said. “I was hopin’ he was devastated.”
Lorraine laughed. A big laugh. God, it was beautiful. The sound of her laugh warmed your chest from the inside, spreading down to every nerve in your body. Only she could make you feel like that. You had always known it, but this just proved it even further.
“I missed you,” she said softly. Her fingers continued to gently pick at yours. “Missed just bein’ with you.”
“I missed you too,” you answered.
Hesitantly, you turned your head to place a ghost of a kiss on her cheek. If you thought about it for too long, you believed you felt her shiver. It could’ve been a figment of your imagination, but you didn’t think so. She leaned back with what little space she had left, leaving no room between the two of you.
“I think you need a new ring,” you said as you ran your thumb over her ring finger again.
“Buy me dinner first,” Lorraine said without hesitation. Her voice sounded sleepy. “I’m still recovering from a failed engagement, remember?”
“Oh yeah,” you said. “I bet you’re devastated.”
“Heartbroken, really,” she said as she turned around, placing her legs on either side of your hips, keeping you trapped. You were done when her arms wrapped themselves around your neck.
“You have my condolences,” you said. Her eyes were mesmerising.
“Thank you.” Her fingers played with the hair on the back of your neck. It tickled. “I think I just need some comfort.”
“Well lucky for you, that’s my job,” you said. “I can bring you all the comfort you need.”
Her smile was contagious. God, it was so pretty. She was so pretty, scars and all. You had missed her, in every way you could imagine. Being able to sit with her, tease, joke, enjoy just being with her? You had missed it all. And when she leaned forward to rest her forehead against yours? You were in heaven.
“I think I just want-”
“-oh shit.”
The voice forced your body to tense up. Lorraine’s hands gripped the back of your shirt tighter before she hid her head in the crook of your neck. Across from where you were sitting, at the bottom of the stairs by the kitchen, was Bull. A monster of a man if ever you saw one.
If you ignored his Garfield sleep shirt.
“Sorry, Mama,” he said with a smirk. “Just came down for a snack.”
Of course he did. Out of everyone, Moose and Bull were the ones who snacked in the middle of the night. None of the other Vets came down. They would wander, sure, but they wouldn’t get the munchies. For Moose, it was from the weed. Bull? Well, he was just a big guy.
“Cookies are in the cupboard,” you said with a gesture of your head.
Lorraine gripped you tighter.
“Chocolate chip?” He asked even though he was already digging for them.
“Shortbread,” you answered.
“Fuck yes,” he mumbled once he found them. “Thanks, Mama.” He froze at the bottom of the stairs and looked back at you. “Night, you two.”
“Night, Bull,” you called back.
The two of you must have been quite the sight to see in the middle of the night. Sitting on the floor, not moving, holding each other like your lives depended on it. Which maybe they did, you couldn’t be sure. It certainly felt like they did. Like Lorraine would disappear if you gave her any sort of space. You had lost her too many times, you wouldn’t risk it again.
“Sorry,” you mumbled into her hair. “The guys get restless.”
“Mama?” She asked. You could feel her smile against your skin.
“Someone’s gotta mother them,” you defended. “It ain’t like they’re grown or nothin’.”
Lorraine giggled. “I like it, it’s cute.”
Your fingers traced every inch of her skin they could find. When they ran out? They trailed under her shirt. Nothing scandalous, you just wanted to touch her. To feel her and confirm that yes, she was with you. She wasn’t gone, she wasn’t someone else’s, she was yours. Only yours. Your girl, your Rainey.
“Don’t they care?” She asked, pulling back to look into your eyes.“About…” she trailed off. You knew who she was talking about.
“No,” you said with a soft smile, “not at all.”
“Can we-” she stopped mid-sentence. Her eyes drifted down.
You stayed silent to give her time to focus on her words. This whole situation was… difficult, to say the least. Disappearing for years, lying to everyone for years before that. The years had flown by, and who knew how many you had left. But you could give her a few more minutes to get her thoughts in order.
“Can we stay here?” She asked, finally looking back up at you. “All of us? Together?”
That was all you had ever wanted to hear. All you had ever desired from the moment you had realised your feelings for her. To be able to be with her forever, in any capacity, as long as you could call her yours. Lorraine was the only one your heart and body and soul yearned for. 
And to have your guys with you? The ones who had been with you both through thick and thin, who had supported you even when things were tough? They were as much your loved ones as Lorraine. Your happily ever after included them too, and you knew Lorraine felt the same.
You leaned forward to capture her lips in a kiss. Soft, gentle, slow. But no less passionate. It was a kiss to make up for the years apart. To make up for all the secrecy, and hiding, and shame. A single kiss to confess your devotion to her and her only. It was enough to have your heart beating so fast you swore it would explode.
Even though she chased after you, you pulled away until you could look into her eyes again.
“Buy me dinner first,” you said, repeating what she had told you earlier.
“You’re lucky I love you,” she said with a smile that stretched across her face in the most delectable way.
“You’re lucky I love you too,” you said, leaning forward to give her another kiss. One that held no shame. It tasted of freedom.
“I need to hold you,” she whispered against your lips. “Take me to bed?”
Well that. Now that you could do.
“I’m your Huckleberry.”
—---
The sun was hot on your back, scorching whatever piece of skin it could find. If you didn’t quit soon, you’d be burned to hell and back. And if you were sunburned, you knew there was an entire compound full of people that would make it a point to hit it. A bunch of sorry bastards is what they were.
The joints in your knees ached as you stood up straight and stretched. A pop here or there released some of the tension. Enough, at least, to start walking back to the house. With a towel in hand, you started scrubbing the dirt off your ring. The last thing you wanted was Lorraine to see you had dirtied it all up.
“Your wife is making cookies,” Huck said when you stepped onto the porch. “Something about you havin’ a sweet tooth?”
“Legally she’s yours,” you said with a raised brow that intimidated no one. “And I don’t have a sweet tooth, that’s Tack.”
“Can’t be, he’s out at the barn with Beau,” he said.
He held out a beer, nice and cold, and you took it with a mumbled “thanks.” His lazy ass was in the same spot it had been all day; on the rocking chair beside Hank’s little dog bed. The moment he had seen Hank, you knew it was love. If it had been up to him, the dog would’ve been sleeping in the bed with him and Beau every night.
Beau shut that down real quick.
“Beau and I got competition in two weeks,” Huck said as you quickly sat down on the porch in front of him. “Think we can harvest in time?”
You took a swig of your beer and pulled out the pack of cigarettes from your shirt pocket.
“Probably not,” you said before inhaling the smoke. “But Greenback’s arrest last week means he owes me.” A slow exhale. “We’ll get it done while you’re gone.”
“I think Hippie wanted to travel with us,” he continued. “Said he was curious.”
“He’s been curious for years,” you chuckled. “At least he’s finally askin’ instead of mopin’ while y’all are gone.”
“Be nice to him,” he said. “At least he likes hangin’ around.”
“Course he likes hangin’ around, the four of us do everything for ‘em,�� you teased.
Huck laughed, and you couldn’t help but smile with him. “Ain’t that the truth. Where would they be without us?”
“Gettin’ arrested,” Beau said, appearing beside you. Tack was nowhere to be seen.
“Speak of the devil,” Huck mumbled.
“You only show up when we’re gossipin’,” you claimed.
“I heard your wife’s makin’ cookies,” he said. You smiled to yourself and took another drag of your cigarette as Beau fell gracefully into Huck’s lap. You also ignored the sound of him kissing him.
“Know how you only call Beau my husband when he’s in trouble?” You asked, turning back to look at the both of them. “You do the same with Lorraine, so what’d she do now?”
“We just think you should be the one to test her cookies first,” Beau said.
“Make sure she don’t poison any of us, again” Huck continued.
“Y’all better hush before she hears,” you whispered as you reached out to slap one of the four legs that you could reach. You didn’t know who it belonged to, and you didn’t really care.
“Her cobbler the other day poisoned Roy,” Beau claimed. “Said so himself.”
“Roy don’t even like peaches,” you said, “so he’s full of shit.”
“He said he- oh hey, Rainey.”
Beau changed his tune quickly when Lorraine walked out onto the porch. Judging by the look on her face, she had heard the gossip. Damn her and her good hearing. You certainly didn’t have it, you would have been ignorant to everything if it had happened outside the door. And that was just fine by you.
“Jane helped with the cookies,” she defended, “so no one is gettin’ poisoned.”
“Told you it was fine,” you called back to them.
Lorraine sat down beside you and pulled you into a quick kiss. You didn’t think you would ever get used to the feeling. Every time she even looked at you, your stomach twisted and turned into knots in the best way. Let her ring be in sight? Oh god, it drives you crazy. She was your wife. And everyone knew it.
“You goin’ to work tonight?” She asked.
“Nah,” you shook your head. “I’m free till tomorrow night. Why?”
“Max and the crew are comin’ by later,” Lorraine said as she rested her head on your shoulder. “Wanted to make sure we’d be home.”
“Course we will be,” you said as you pressed another kiss to the top of her head. “There’s nowhere better.”
The four of you sat on the porch and continued to look out at the home you had all built. A full barn, trailers, and bales of hay waiting to be moved. Across the way were the fields full of more crops than you could reasonably harvest, but that was alright. You would just prepare better for next year. Out to the left was a field you had claimed as your own. It housed the crosses for all the patients you met at the hospital. In the very front was Eric’s. You kept some Lucky Strikes and a pack of baseball cards by it.
Never in your wildest dreams had you ever imagined you would have everyone together and actually living the lives you had all hoped for. To think, it had all started off messy. Now, you all had lives, and hopes and dreams that you didn’t fear would be squashed just for existing. You could love. You could be loved. Out there in the East coast where your dreams had always led you.
With Lorraine’s fingers intertwined with your own, you exhaled another cloud of smoke and looked out.
There was something relaxing about spending a day outdoors on your and your loved ones’ farm.
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Cry for Help, Chapter 4
Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3
Relationship(s): Cordell Walker/Emily Walker
Tags: Canonical Character Death, Mystery, Hospitals, Angst, Hurt No Comfort
Summary: What happened to Emily
Written for @medwhumpmay prompt 30- From the Brink of Death
Taglist: @theladywyn, @ihavepointysticks, @klaatu51, @itsjessiegirl1, @neptunium134
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Ten Years Ago
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Walker, but we've done everything we can. The bullets hit him in some vital places. His chance of survival is low. Even if he does make it, he'll likely never walk again, and that’s being optimistic. We won’t know the full extent of his condition until he wakes up, but we’re not sure that will happen either. The next 48 hours will be critical. We’ll do everything we can but it may be time to have some difficult conversations with your family about what’s next.”
Emily nodded. “Thank you, doctor,” she said calmly before turning and walking back to the waiting room.
This was always a possibility, she knew that. The kind of work Cordell did was dangerous on a good day and deadly on a bad day. That was why she’d insisted on getting life insurance policies and making sure they set up a will soon after the kids were born. They needed to be prepared if anything happened.
She thought doing all that would give her security in a moment like this. She thought knowing that no matter what happened in the field, their family would be taken care of, would help her grieve. She thought having a few less things to worry about would ease her mind.
But all she could think about was what the hell she was supposed to do once he flatlined.
Stella and August were still in elementary school, only just starting to form the most important memories of their lives. They thought their father was a hero and the most indestructible man alive. Just last week Cordell had promised August they could check out the local cub scouts group because August wanted to try camping. He and Stella had just started reading the next Hank the Cowdog book together. She’d been refusing to read the next chapter until her dad came home.
They were both so young, had so much life to live, so many milestones to experience…..
And Cordell wouldn’t be there for any of them.
She sat in the waiting room for over an hour just trying to wrap her head around this. She tried to tell herself that a miracle could happen, that her husband could wake up and at least be alive if not completely 100%. She could work around a disability and him finding a new job. Their kids could still have their father, he could still be there for their most important moments. It would all be fine, just fine.
She couldn’t even convince herself. How on earth was she supposed to tell Stella and August? Or his parents? Or their friends?
Her phone binged with a text, sharply knocking her out of her thoughts. Opening her phone,s he saw it was Abby, asking for an update. She responded that they would talk when she got home and quickly left the building. 
On the drive home, she rehearsed what she would say to her family. It’s not looking good, but the doctors will do everything they can. There’s a chance he could pull through. We have to believe in that.
She had to believe there was a chance. She had to. If she didn’t-
It was 2 in the morning and she sat alone at a 4-way stop, a plain crossroads about a mile from the Walker ranch. No one else was around and she couldn’t bear to tell anyone that Cordell was dying. Not yet.
Her forehead fell onto the steering wheel and she cried. She cried for her husband, dying for people who would never truly appreciate him. She cried for a marriage that should’ve lasted so much longer. She cried for the childhood Stella dn August wouldn’t have. She cried for a family that lost a son, a brother, a husband, a father far too soon.
She cried, because there was nothing else she could do. She cried because if she didn’t do it then, she would break down at the worst moment.
“There, there darling, it’s not so bad.” A kind voice broke through her tears and someone pushed a tissue at her face.
“Thank you,” she murmured, wiping her eyes and blowing her nose. She flipped down the sun visor to check the damage her tears had done on her makeup. No sense showing up looking like a wreck.
In the mirror, over her shoulder, she saw a man sitting in the backseat. She screamed and reached for the gun in her glove compartment.
“Now, now, no need for that.” A strong hand gripped her arm and she stilled. “Come now, you don’t want to shoot the man who’s going to help you.”
She glared at him through the rear-view mirror. “Help me with what, exactly? I’m married, just in case the ring didn’t tip you off, and my husband-”
“Is currently dying in a hospital 10 miles from here. Yes, he’s terrifying. I’m quaking in my boots.”
Emily swallowed hard. She was alone in a car with a man that clearly had disdain for her husband. Who knew what he planned to do? “Wh-What do you want?”
“I want to make you an offer.” He blinked and his eyes turned red. She gasped and- in a blink- he’d moved from the backseat to the passenger seat. “Look, we both know you’re stalling going home because you don’t want to tell the kiddos and his parents that he’s dying. And I know you don’t want him to die either. I don’t blame you; he’s a good man. And I can help you with that, for a price.”
Emily stared at him, pressing her back against her door. “I- What? How did-”
The man sighed. “I’ll spare you the theatrics and explain: I’m a demon and I’m offering you a deal. I fix your husband right as rain, and you sign your soul over to me.”
She shook her head. Sure, he was a demon. She could buy that. She was raised Catholic, after all. But a deal? No. No, Cordell wouldn’t want that. “So you save his life and I drop dead? I’ll pass.”
“Who said anything about you dropping dead? I mean, you will eventually. All humans do. But it wouldn’t be a fair deal if I just made you switch places in the hospital now would it? Hardly worth a soul. No, I have a better offer.” He smirked. “You get to keep your soul- and your life- for say… 10 years. 10 long, beautiful years with your husband. You get to watch him advance his career, raise your children with him, maybe get around to paying off that house. Sure, you won’t reach retirement age, but 10 years is a long time. There’s a lot a smart lady like you can do with that time.”
10 years. That was a long time. Stella and August would be in high school by then. Practically out of the house. Cordell had enough of a support network that he could manage without her for a bit. And at that age, he wouldn’t have to worry about them acting out if he wanted to get married again. Maybe-
No. What was she thinking? Selling her soul to a demon wasn’t the answer. Cordell would never forgive her if he found out. He wouldn’t want this for her- no one would. And how could she live with herself, knowing she doomed him to suffer losing her in the end?
Unless.
“10 years isn’t enough. I’d give you my soul for-”
“I’m not in the business of negotiating,” the demon said firmly. “10 years is a more than generous offer. Most people would get less, but I’m feeling sorry for you.” When Emily didn’t say anything, he sighed. “Listen, I know this is a tough choice, but the way I see it you don’t have much of one. Either your husband dies and everyone loses one of the best people they know, or you take the opportunity that’s been dropped in your lap and save him. It’s not perfect, I know, but nothing in this universe is. At least this way he has a chance of dying with dignity in old age instead of wrapped in a million tubes and pissing in a bag. Don’t you want that for him?”
God she did want that for him. She wanted that for him so badly. But was it really worth it? For just 10 years? Anything could happen in 10 years. Cordell could end up right back here and she’d have nothing left to bargain with.
Or maybe he’d be fine. Maybe he’d get his chance to be a father, watch their kids grow up, make so many more memories with his family.
Maybe they could get lucky.
“I…. I’ll take the deal.”
The demon smirked. “I knew you would, darling. Now, let’s make it official.”
Emily held her breath while he kissed her. She sat in the car staring at nothing for a few long minutes after he disappeared. Then, she rushed home.
It’s not looking good, but the doctors will do everything they can. There’s a chance he could pull through. We have to believe in that.
The next morning, she got an urgent call from the hospital. Cordell’s condition had rapidly improved overnight. “We must’ve read some of the scans wrong,” they reasoned. “He’ll still need some time to heal but he should be ready to come home in a few weeks.”
When Emily told her children the good news, she knew she’d made the right choice. Watching Cordell get better, she knew it was worth her soul.
Even 10 years later, when a hellhound was chasing her to her doom, she couldn’t find it in herself to regret it.
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Hank the Cowdog books are a great way to introduce the concept of the unreliable narrator to kids, by the way.
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ghostcrows · 4 months
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Oh my God I forgot about Hank the cowdog
I always do this I forget about hank the cow dog. It's sick how I do this
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starshipoftheseus · 8 months
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tag game :0
tagged by @bbpuckdrop thank u! OvO
3 ships i like: not the biggest shipper around, really my only ones are eighth doctor/charley pollard (god i LOVE them) & eighth doctor/fitz kreiner from the doctor who expanded medias
first ship: heck... connor temple/abby maitland from primeval. real 2000s british sci fi OGs know
last song i heard: surrender by iamx
favorite childhood book: hey who said these games were gonna be HARD i think the first hank the cowdog book HOLY BONKERS IT CAME OUT IN 1983 AND THE SERIES IS STILL GOING? that's so wild. other than that there's a book about the coelacanth called fossil fish found alive that i read over and over again. if you give me enough time i'll remember way more
currently reading: ashamed to say that a while ago i stopped in the middle of interference book 2 (eighth doctor adventures) and just haven't picked it back up
currently watching: right at THIS MOMENT i'm watching the bruins/caps game lol but tv-wise, the bear season 2 and it's incredible
currently consuming: water. slurp
currently craving: grillcheese and tomato soup
tagging: some of my new hockey mutuals hello friends @dwisp @larssunny @krakenkrunch @olliebjorkstrand @cryinginthedeep @burkysmirky
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