20/11/17
7:08 PM
WREN ♥ ♥
It was eight minutes past the time Wren had anticipated he'd be ready to go and he was making his way up the steps to the front door of Samael's house. Technically, it was the house he shared with the other man but the setup tonight was different. He'd ducked out two hours beforehand and took the transit to downtown Harper Rock to find a place which carried fresh cut flowers. Not just any fresh cut flowers though; he was looking for a florist that carried the widest variety of roses.
He had a vision in mind that he'd wanted to breathe life into the idea the second he and Sam had agreed to go to the carnival together. Unfortunately for him, Harper Rock was a small town and not everything was as expansive as he was accustomed to. He'd spent a good long while circling the little flower boutique after finding out they didn't carry any Rainbow Vendelas. But he'd finally settled on the suggestion the junior florist had been offering to him for nearly three quarters of an hour. The woman flashed him an aggravated look before wrapping up the single rose for him to take with him.
Wren knocked on the front door before taking a step back, idly cradling his camera in his free hand and the rose in the other. He was picking up his date. Because that was what was supposed to happen on first dates, wasn't it?
SAMAEL ♠
It had taken some coaxing on Wren’s part. His skepticism wavered at the third day mark, withering in the face of Wren’s enthusiasm and the sleek, laminated flyer that dutifully dogged his heels from one living space to the next. Samael's had never been to a carnival. The closest point of reference was a faded memory, hazy with the years. A sepia toned polaroid, once pristine white edges cracked and yellowed, rested in the bottom of a storage chest meant for winter clothing.
In it, a young Sam posed alongside a taller, lankier youth, the latter sporting a pair of hand me down overalls and a white dress shirt two sizes too large, whose sleeves threatened to swallow the boy’s hands. By contrast, the older boy at his side wore stonewashed jeans and a navy button down, complete with a stiff denim jacket. Their arms were raised, the pair flexing inside of a game booth, an oversized stuffed dalmatian at their feet.
It had been his first state fair. He'd spent the better part of the evening in a trance-like state, awed by the bright colors and dizzying sweetness of autumn leaves and funnel cakes, and the sharper, saltier smell of wet earth that perfumed the night. His jaw was perpetually slack, a fact his older siblings teased him relentlessly about as they trooped home. Sam has been allowed a bag of kettle corn, drizzled with warm caramel, savoring the contrast of salt and a sweetness that made his teeth ache.
He shook free of the memory at the knock, rising from the couch and crossing into the short foyer. He slid the deadbolt back, the chain clattering as it swung on its weighted hook, followed by the deadbolt, before grabbing the knob and twisting. He studied Wren for a moment, lips drawing back in the barest flash of a grin.
“The boyscouts are campaigning early this year,” he remarked, leaning a hip against the doorframe.
“Hi.”
WREN ♥ ♥
Colours shifted over the sky, vibrant shades of peach, blush and lavender spreading across the cerulean with the sinking sun filtering through the crevices in between the wisps of cream-coloured clouds, setting their edges alight with gilt. Dusk was passing by quickly, like it was eager to make an entrance for the inky darkness of nightfall. Wren glanced up towards the sky. He couldn't remember the last time he'd seen the stars since he'd come to Harper Rock. It wasn't like the city was a large metropolis, homing millions of people with their various living quarters. It wasn't like back in Los Angeles, when the blinds came down on Santa Monica, and the entire strip lit up with such panache that from up in the air, it looked like a swarm of fireflies had flocked, thus blotting out the light from the stars in the sky. No, there was something different about Harper Rock, like it was dipped in constant darkness. Like even the brightest of summer days had a trickle of unease that followed it like a sentient, hateful shadow.
"Nervous?"
Wren started, nearly dropping his camera and the rose as he whipped around to find Cassie leaned against the railing, his brows raised. "Jesus Chr-- Cas, what the ****, man?" His pulse was racing now like that of a cornered rabbit's, demeanour just as leery. He hung his camera around his neck so that his butterfingers didn't drop it to its doom. "No... maybe. A little." he admitted, his dark brows pulling together as he eyed the flower, wrapped in delicate tissue and cardboard, held together with a grey, silk ribbon. "Please don't **** this up." he sighed and glanced at Cas from the corner of his eyes, unclear whether he was speaking to the man or to himself. He was given a small knowing smile in return and then he was gone. Just in time, too. The door swung open and there he was. Denim-clad Adonis with hair like a tangible halo around his crown.
Samael.
It was the name of an aingeal as far as Wren knew and he only really knew because he had googled it. He'd thought at first that maybe he had heard wrong, just as the barista had the day they had met at Lucile's, or maybe the man had a speech impediment. It was certainly not a common name by anyone's standards. Except Sam's family apparently. Either way, from what Wren gathered, Samael was said to be one of the angels and he thought it was oddly fitting. Not because he saw the man as some kind of an ethereal being that disembodied voices sang choruses around but because angels were said to be toughened warriors. Scrappy fuckers. Not at all like the depictions of the kind-eyed, glowing, sweet-natured androgynes that often completed a scene in a child's religious picture book, the kinds that Wren himself was used to growing up in his household. Not that his family was ever fundamentally religious. (They weren't a regular Catholic family, they were a cool Catholic family.)
Still. Samael had that glow about him. Or maybe it was the way his gilded hair caught the light.
"The boy scouts are campaigning early this year."
"Thanks, you clean up nicely too." Wren flashed the man a crooked grin, sheepish in nature, rubbing the back of his neck as it heated up. "Heh, hey." he then grinned a little wider, less embarrassed. He took a step forward and set a hand lightly on Sam's side before tipping his head up to brush his lips against his cheek. "This is yours." he held up the rose for him.
SAMAEL ♠
Samael’s family were best described, if one felt generous, as fanatics. For the less generously inclined, the term ‘zealots,’ among less flattering descriptors, was closer to the mark. His mother prized her faith above all else, so it stood to reason that she named her children to reflect her passions. Her sons carried the names of angels, her eldest two named for both a messenger and the bearer of scales. Her daughters were named after saints, reflecting virtues held closer than a rosary to her side. . Then there was Samael; named for a creature of radiance and vengeance; the odd man out in her carefully crafted theme. But in that moment, at least, she seemed wide of her mark.
His gaze softened at the crooked grin that Wren flashed, the corners of his lips quirking into a fond, mildly self conscious grin in reply. It was new for him, this unguarded honesty. It was uncomfortable at times, chafing against his better judgment, but not entirely unpleasant. The kiss was met with a hushed, contented sound, the note trailing into a rumbling one of question. He accepted the rose, one brow arching.
”Thank you. Save some moves for me, Casanova.” He could count the number of times he'd received a gift from anyone outside of immediate family, much less flowers of any kind.
Still, he knew enough to know it'd suffer from a lack of water after a handful of hours and so he moved inside, gesturing Wren over the threshold.
”Help me find something to put this in. Then we can leave.”