Entry tags:
OPEN | prompt one | RAIN
![]() |
prompt one | R A I N I have been one acquainted with the night. I have walked out in rain - and back in rain. I have outwalked the furthest city light. I have looked down the saddest city lane. |
![]() |
prompt one | R A I N I have been one acquainted with the night. I have walked out in rain - and back in rain. I have outwalked the furthest city light. I have looked down the saddest city lane. |
no subject
Alright, hon, [ he says, leaning down (his frame casting a shadow over hers) for a split second as he kisses the top of her head, the base of his palm briefly finding her cheek. (He keeps his fingers curled away; there's dirt on his hands and he doesn't want to get it on her. There's no way of really staying clean, not in this environment, but still. He tries.)
Smiling at her one last time, he excuses himself from the tent. He spends the time between his arrival at their own tent, pitched a little ways away, and hers, doing what he can to tidy the place up. (Again, there's little point, considering how constantly they move, but still.
He tries.) ]
no subject
But still.)
The wind blows in after her, gutting the candles dotted around the small enclosure, threatening to blow them out completely. All it takes is a strong gust, the loose fabric of the open flap snapping noisily behind her and half of the lights snuff out completely, for which Madchen curses (unlady-like, her good mood threatening to falter) once under her breath.
Hastily she tries to refasten the door. ] I tell you what, sometimes—
[ Sometimes she doesn't know what she's thinking; sometimes she wishes she could just do something right. The rain's not her fault and neither is the wind, but Madchen's like that, always has been.
Blaming herself for things outside of her control.
(Sometimes things just happen.) ]
no subject
[ Quick as you like, the tent flap is refastened and there's a candle lit. (Sometimes things just happen, but Jonathan has always done his best to patch things up after the fact. He's good at that. At fixing things. His hands, though rough-skinned and indelicate in appearance, are careful, gentle things.) Once he's checked the flap of the tent again, he turns to look at his wife. ]
You alright?
no subject
(Not anymore. She's seen the dark, the actual dark. The very edge of where the world drops off into a horrible, hollow nothingness.)
It's at a horrible cost, but they can't go without light, not ever, or else risk Madchen going into hysterics. Between the two of them they hardly see a whole night slept through, having to light and re-light the lamps so that there's always something to keep the darkness at bay. (It's such a burden, Madchen knows. Such a terrible weight.)
Her eyes are large and frantic when Johnny's match flares and his candle pierces through the shadows, bathing Madchen's face in blessed, thankful light. Her hand reaches for his sleeve, curls into the fabric, pulling him closer. ]
Just fine, Johnny. [ She sounds like she's trying to convince herself, not him. ] Good as ever.
no subject
His hand rises to curl gently about her elbow, the hand holding the candle kept to the side so as not to burn either of them, even if the wind should blow any harder than it does now. ]
Okay, [ is what he says (it's probably one of the most-used words in his vocabulary).
There are a lot of things to be afraid of, and he doesn't blame her for a single one. ]
I'll get the other candles, okay?