#Thad is absolutely appalled
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dementedspeedster · 4 years ago
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‘ now i’m falling asleep and she’s calling a crab and he’s having a smoke and she’s kissing the crab. ’
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@crashedthemode
Thad grabs Bart by the shoulders and shakes him once with a wild look in eye. He swears Bart’s doing this to annoy him. He swears he cannot be cloned from, that he can’t share a majority of the same DNA with someone who thinks this specific song has anything to do with ‘crabs’.
“You don’t actually think this song is about crabs?! Do you Bart?! Do you?!“
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gulfportofficial · 5 years ago
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Anyway, here’s some more WIP GP (I think some of you may have seen bits of this before? I told you it was taking me forever).
I loved how he looked when he woke up. Cranky and rumpled and soft all at the same time, his black hair messy and his skin warm from the bedclothes. It seemed to take him a minute or two to hear me well enough to respond to me. How human he was, still, that even now with his impossible strength, he woke up groggy. I climbed onto the bed, and then onto him, and kissed him on the mouth.
He smiled against it. He put his arms around me. “Has the paper come?”
Typical, I thought of saying, but did not. I wasn’t really annoyed by it. That clever little occupation of his, that too, was part of his sweetness too. “Yes,” I said, “and I’ve got the Picayune.”
Louis shuffled up and arranged his pillows fussily, so he could lean back onto them. “You’re very good to me,” he said. “Was it a nice walk?”
“Entirely uneventful,” I said. “Kiss me again and I’ll let you read your papers.”
He did. “Will you tell me the shape of the evening so that I know how long I have to read them?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, did your mother mention what time she was arriving? Do we need to go out before she comes?” he asked. “I don’t mind doing that.”
It would be entirely wrong to say that I had forgotten she was coming. I had thought about nothing else since her call. I had thought about it in my sleep and upon waking and during my walk and while he was kissing me. But I thought about it so hard it didn’t seem to be present in my real life. I swallowed, and Louis looked at me strangely.
“I don’t know,” I said. “She might want to go out together.” “It’s a shame you just can’t call her to check,” Louis said.
I didn’t bother to answer that. Such a pointless dig. Was that the shape of the evening then, something structured by Louis’ painful and barbed asides catching at my flesh? I rolled off him and fished out my laptop computer. I took my notebook and glasses from the bedside table. He didn’t comment.
There wasn’t much for me to attend to on the internet. A few emails. Facebook nonsense. I had been tagged in some photographs and proceeded to vet them. I do like candid photographs, but there are limits.
Louis had picked up the Press-Register. “Why don’t we go out just in case,” he said. “If she wants to, we can go again.”
I don’t think he was thinking this through. As a general rule, we do not hunt so close to where we live, unless we can truly be sure it is a little drink only and nothing more. We didn’t have time to go far enough afield. At least I felt we didn’t have time. He was right that I couldn’t call to check.
“You go,” I said. “I’ll wait.”
“That’s alright. If you want to wait, we’ll wait. I’ll survive.”
“Won’t it drive you mad?” I said. I’d opened up my Notes document and begin to transcribe.
“You forget to whom it is you’re speaking,” Louis said, and I was about to tell him off, but he was right. Anyone who could live on rats for as long as he had could skip a night. Just one though, allowing for the precedent of the consequences of his doing that.
“How’s the Gulf?” I asked, deliberately.
Louis gave me a look, but it worked, as I knew it would. “Thad Allen’s leaving,” he said.
“I don’t know who that is.”
“The Coastguard National Incident Commander. He actually stepped down moths ago but…”
I sighed. “Unlike you, Louis, I have better things to do than read everything about the fucking oil spill, so obviously I don’t know what that is either. When you tell a story like this you must structure in a referent or two so I am able to orient myself.”
I regretted saying that. I regretted saying anything that could stop him from focusing on the spill instead of my mother. “It’s called glossing,” I said, hastily. “One should gloss.”
I wonder if he took pity on me then, because he went on with only the slightest air of annoyance. “Admiral Allen,” Louis said, “is a Coast Guard official and the man appointed by President Obama to oversee responses to the disaster. He has a most distinguished career, actually, and…”
“What did he do?”
“Many things, but…”
“No, I mean, why is he stepping down? What did he do? Did he get caught taking a bribe or something else scandalous?”
“I think he’s just retiring.”
“Oh,” I said. “That’s dull.”
“He’s responsible for most of the online mapping.”
“The what?”
“I showed you,” Louis said. “The computer map of the spill and how it was spreading. On the internet. That was his idea, to make that map public.”  
“Oh yes, I remember,” I said. I didn’t. I was bored with the internet now anyway. I hopped out of bed, and started to flick through my wardrobe. I’d shower and dress, I felt better equipped to face the evening showered and dressed. I felt the need to cement things with a lot of ritual. Prayer. I thought I might do something to my face and slipped into the bathroom.
“What’s that on your face?” Louis asked when I slipped out. “Supernatural late stage leprosy?”
“Shut up,” I said, then I read off the jar for him, “it’s a Green Clay Masque with Rice Enzyme.”
Louis opened his mouth to say something, then seemed to think better of it. I supposed I knew what it was – you don’t need that, it will have absolutely no effect on you – but I wondered why he decided not to lecture me. Perhaps he couldn’t be bothered.
He could think what he liked anyway. I felt the stuff drying on my face and I liked the sensation of it, it felt redeeming in some manner. I set the jar down and sat back on the bed and pulled out my laptop again. Nothing on Facebook had changed and it was all still boring. I trawled through it anyway. One feels obligated, or else compulsion. That,too, is like a naturalized little prayer against disaster.
Louis ran a gentle, distracted-seeming hand up and down on my back as I did. “My mother…” he said. I looked up.
I wasn’t sure if he’d trailed off out of discomfort, or simply because he didn’t intend to keep speaking. “What, Louis?”
“When my brother died…” Louis said, and that was surprising enough that I had to actually turn around to look at him. He never spoke about this. Never. And it didn’t precisely seem buried, not on his face now, nor in the fact that he’d stuttered himself out of speaking. Once turned around I held perfectly still.
He began again. “When my brother died,” Louis said, “well, you probably remember my telling you this, but we’d argued. Almost immediately before. Moments before. And my mother blamed me.”
“That’s not kind,” I said. “And it’s not true. Brothers exchange harsh words sometimes.”
“No, you’ve misunderstood,” Louis said. “I mean that she believed I’d committed the act. She asked the police to question me.”
Oh, Louis, I wanted to say. How horrible. How cruel. “Is that why you can’t understand a mother caring for you, or being your friend or being intimate?”
“Perhaps it is,” Louis said. “My mother and I were never particularly at odds before then, but we weren’t close either. I don’t know. I don’t know what she thought.”
“Why didn’t you ask her?”
“You’re correct that we didn’t have that sort of intimacy. I don’t recall ever asking her much of anything.”
How quickly I regretted this Green Clay Masque with Rice Enzyme. It had already started to itch and I wanted it off me, but I could not move to interrupt what Louis was saying. My heart wouldn’t let me do that.
“I don’t think my family in general liked me very much,” Louis said, his solemn white face still and his eyes far away. “Furthermore, I’m not sure I deserved being liked, since I don’t recall I was very kind to them. My father died and I focused on management, and I don’t wonder if that’s all I did. My sister said as much, after… well, after you and I… after I sent her to the city.”
“Did she really just announce that to you,” I said. “That she didn’t like you? That’s an awfully rude thing to say to the person funding your lifestyle.”
Louis raised an eyebrow at me. I took the point. However, there was strangely little malice in his expression considering how much room in it for malice there was. That was curious and I waited for him to continue.
“Yes she did,” he said. “She and I did become close then. When I visited her, we did talk, and with a great deal of frankness and intimacy, and she said very directly that I had become kinder and that she had begun to understand and to like me. So perhaps my mother simply knew an unkind person.”
But the real you must have shone through, I wanted to say. It seemed impossible to me that anyone could have met Louis and not instantly fallen as fatally in love as I, even, if not especially, his mother. Someone so beautiful, so passionate, so gentle and particular and odd, you’d need a heart of stone not to love him. But perhaps all of his reservations with me had come from this. Perhaps like all of us, Louis had been irreparably shaped by the first person ever to hold his vulnerable mortal body as it came into this world, forever formed by whatever definition of love was taught to him.
“Your mother was crazed with grief, chéri,” I said. “That’s all it was. You didn’t deserve that.”
“Well,” he said. He opened the paper again. His face was flat now. He’d finished. Any grief of his own that lingered, he wouldn’t show me.
I tried, subtly, to scratch my face, but I stopped before he looked at me. If he noticed he’d say something pointedly right about the masque and I didn’t want him to do that. “Whatever happened to that man your sister married,” I said. “She married that… I forget, but there was something about him…”
It was desperate. But I hoped it at least sounded conversational.
“There was nothing about him,” Louis said. “Unless you mean the fact that he was profoundly inbred, which yes, I suppose, is notable from a certain point of view.”
I snorted. “You’re a snob, chaton.”
“I’m nothing of the sort. It’s your kind who inbreed. The middle classes marry out.”
“You are…” I said, but I didn’t know what he was. Terrible, at least, I wanted to say. Absolutely appalling. I felt myself smiling, preparing to tease.
“Listen, Monsieur,” Louis said, and I stopped. He said it firmly, a stately little command, and it worked on me instantly. I listened, I waited.
“Listen, Monsieur,” he said, again. “I intend to be an asset to you in this, not a obstacle.”
“What? What do you mean?”
“That’s all,” he said. “Go on. Go on about your strange ablutions. I’m going to finish these papers.”
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