Thrall Games - (Lancaster dArtois)
Posted: 25 Feb 2016, 10:50
‹Michael Porter› Michael didn’t frequent Lancaster’s. He’d learned pretty early in the peace, that the tall Australian wasn’t exactly his number one fan. He wasn’t sure why, Michael rather thought he had a glittering personality. It was sharp, like diamonds. Of the first water even.
Nah, he knew he was an asshole. He didn’t function under a false sense of who he was and he understood his own mutinous lack of common courtesy. He just rarely cared enough to try to be anything different. As a dubiously talented physician he’d done enough to get by, work the system and then sit back with the life plan to do piss all. He ******* hated sick people and their whinging.
He also disliked the fact that he was walking through the front door of this kitchy Irish pub intent on tracking down the man Pi loved. It’s not that he held a great deal of affection for her. Not like that. Well, sometimes like that. He was a man, and he wasn’t ******* blind. But she had never been someone he could get his hands on, and he’d learned to leer and leave alone. What he felt for her was a visceral thing. A longing seated at the base of his spine, that worked its way through his body squeezing at his internal organs when she was too far away, or he hadn’t talked to her in a while. Like, ******* now, his stomach felt like it wanted to turn itself inside out, the clawing hunger cramping him up like the worlds worst Delhi Belly.
“Hey, hot stuff… where is the tall ugly Australian?” Michael called out, walking towards Bunk at her frowned gesture towards that door. “Attic.” Was the nameless woman’s reply, her frown cut short cause he hadn’t lingered long enough for it to impact his single minded pursuit of the wayward musician. Michael pushed through the first door, ignoring again, another smile, cut short as yet another service industry employee attempted to greet him congenially. He - just moved to the stairs beside Bunk’s reception and up to where he knew the supplies were kept. Stepping out into the attic Michael dug his hands into his jean pockets, the loose trousers sinking lower on his hips as he slouched into the space.
“Hey man… where are you?” Michael called, moving deeper into the open room. He had no idea what the hell he was going to say to this man. He had never, ever intruded into the personal space of these two people. Sure he was Pi’s thrall. Sure he hung around the Den, pissed off a few people with his off colour advances, but mostly he was damn happy not to have to pay bills, pay for any damn thing. Getting in the middle of this obviously tense emotional situation between to estranged lovers was his idea of a freaking nightmare. He’d rather stay home and stab himself in the eyeball with knitting needles. He probably could still opt for that. He amused himself with that lie as he moved forward.
‹Lancaster dArtois› The staff had started to comment on Lancaster’s often drunken state. A couple of times, the more senior of the staff members had told him to go home; they’d said it with a frown and with frigid consternation. None of them knew him well enough to know what to do about it. Someone had suggested talking to Pi about it – but they’d soon found out that the Frenchwoman wasn’t answering calls, and couldn’t be contacted. They all knew that their bosses were a couple. Most of them assumed the two were married – and why not? They wore the rings. Soon, they just guessed – Pi wasn’t there and Lancaster was often drunk. Something had happened. The more vociferous rumours suggested the marriage had gone kaput.
Regardless, they were still getting paid. Lancaster still did the ordering; he was as vigilant as ever with the things that needed to be done. Sometimes, he liked to micromanage, to tell the duty managers what to do when they already knew exactly what needed done. They still got paid enough, and on time. Lancaster was never unkind, or inappropriate. In the end, they could do nothing but wait for it to pass – if it ever passed. They realised that perhaps, he had changed. There was nothing they could do about it.
Tonight, Lancaster had told himself he wouldn’t drink. No, he’d get it together. He’d showered and, resolving to try to relax and take a night off work, he sat in the armchair in the attic, a book open in front of him. The Sick Bag Song – a new collection from Nick Cave. He hoped it might jump start some inspiration. Except it didn’t.
Within fifteen minutes, however, his resolve was broken. Yes, he was still reading. But there was a bottle of fine red wine beside him. Not empty, yet. But it would be soon. An vaguely familiar voice called through the space, jarring Lancaster from his blurring thoughts. Michael, making himself at home. A low growl resonated in Lancaster’s chest. “You ever hear of knocking? It’s ******* grand…”
‹Michael Porter› Michael didn’t know the man well enough to gauge his overarching mood, but he wasn’t stupid. The wine, the sullen expression and the lack of warm greeting wasn’t that hard to interpret. He shrugged the coat off his shoulders, throwing it over the cases of wine which acted like small wall partitions. “Well, **** you too.” He replied, swooping to grab the neck of the open bottle, lifting it straight to his lips. Slumping himself into the matching chair he lifted a leg over the arm and pulled the lever pushing his other leg into the air. He was lucky the damn chair didn’t eject him backwards onto his head. Of course, now that he’d found the poor ********, Michael had no idea what to say next.
‹Lancaster dArtois› Normally, Lancaster enjoyed the company. If it were anyone else, he'd have been overjoyed that someone had sought him out. The email he'd sent to Skylar had still gone unanswered, and he didn't have it in him to go hunt down someone he assumed didn't want to see him. Why Michael? Why now? What the **** did he want? Lancaster watched with disdain as the thrall took the wine away. It probably wasn't a good thing, that Lancaster felt that twitch of rage. "What are you doing here, Michael? What do you want?" he asked. It had never crossed his mind to ask the thrall if he'd been in contact with Pi. It never even registered, that Pi would talk to her thrall, and not the man who was basically, for all intents and purposes, her husband.
‹Michael Porter› “I joined a club.” He replied, staring anywhere but at the man who was sending invisible ‘**** off’ vibes at him from the other chair. As far as starting points go, it was a random one but it made a sort of mad sense to him. He hadn’t really thought too far into the future when he’d gone into that warehouse. But it seemed like a good thing to confess to the other dude in this equation. Maybe he’d understand the madness of his actions. Or maybe he’d think Michael was a damn idiot. “I thought it would bring her back… but… yeah….” Snorting at his own stupidity Michael took another gulp of the wine. He let the open bottle dangle from his loose fingertips, swinging back and forth along the side of the armchair.
‹Lancaster dArtois› It didn't take much for Lancaster to lurch forward and snatch the bottle of wine back, refilling his own glass. He hadn't been drinking from the bottle. He wasn't that far down the rabbit hole yet, tonight. "I'm not going to sit here and pine with you. Not you. You sound like you ******* love her or something, and if you tell me you do, you'd better get the **** out of my place," Lancaster said. Michael had always seemed like a whoring, no-good piece of ****. He'd seen the way the thrall was with Pi, sometimes. It grated on Lancaster's nerves. Nor was he really in the mood to hear about any 'club'. "I'm glad you've found some hobby to keep yourself occupied. You should go do that..."
Nah, he knew he was an asshole. He didn’t function under a false sense of who he was and he understood his own mutinous lack of common courtesy. He just rarely cared enough to try to be anything different. As a dubiously talented physician he’d done enough to get by, work the system and then sit back with the life plan to do piss all. He ******* hated sick people and their whinging.
He also disliked the fact that he was walking through the front door of this kitchy Irish pub intent on tracking down the man Pi loved. It’s not that he held a great deal of affection for her. Not like that. Well, sometimes like that. He was a man, and he wasn’t ******* blind. But she had never been someone he could get his hands on, and he’d learned to leer and leave alone. What he felt for her was a visceral thing. A longing seated at the base of his spine, that worked its way through his body squeezing at his internal organs when she was too far away, or he hadn’t talked to her in a while. Like, ******* now, his stomach felt like it wanted to turn itself inside out, the clawing hunger cramping him up like the worlds worst Delhi Belly.
“Hey, hot stuff… where is the tall ugly Australian?” Michael called out, walking towards Bunk at her frowned gesture towards that door. “Attic.” Was the nameless woman’s reply, her frown cut short cause he hadn’t lingered long enough for it to impact his single minded pursuit of the wayward musician. Michael pushed through the first door, ignoring again, another smile, cut short as yet another service industry employee attempted to greet him congenially. He - just moved to the stairs beside Bunk’s reception and up to where he knew the supplies were kept. Stepping out into the attic Michael dug his hands into his jean pockets, the loose trousers sinking lower on his hips as he slouched into the space.
“Hey man… where are you?” Michael called, moving deeper into the open room. He had no idea what the hell he was going to say to this man. He had never, ever intruded into the personal space of these two people. Sure he was Pi’s thrall. Sure he hung around the Den, pissed off a few people with his off colour advances, but mostly he was damn happy not to have to pay bills, pay for any damn thing. Getting in the middle of this obviously tense emotional situation between to estranged lovers was his idea of a freaking nightmare. He’d rather stay home and stab himself in the eyeball with knitting needles. He probably could still opt for that. He amused himself with that lie as he moved forward.
‹Lancaster dArtois› The staff had started to comment on Lancaster’s often drunken state. A couple of times, the more senior of the staff members had told him to go home; they’d said it with a frown and with frigid consternation. None of them knew him well enough to know what to do about it. Someone had suggested talking to Pi about it – but they’d soon found out that the Frenchwoman wasn’t answering calls, and couldn’t be contacted. They all knew that their bosses were a couple. Most of them assumed the two were married – and why not? They wore the rings. Soon, they just guessed – Pi wasn’t there and Lancaster was often drunk. Something had happened. The more vociferous rumours suggested the marriage had gone kaput.
Regardless, they were still getting paid. Lancaster still did the ordering; he was as vigilant as ever with the things that needed to be done. Sometimes, he liked to micromanage, to tell the duty managers what to do when they already knew exactly what needed done. They still got paid enough, and on time. Lancaster was never unkind, or inappropriate. In the end, they could do nothing but wait for it to pass – if it ever passed. They realised that perhaps, he had changed. There was nothing they could do about it.
Tonight, Lancaster had told himself he wouldn’t drink. No, he’d get it together. He’d showered and, resolving to try to relax and take a night off work, he sat in the armchair in the attic, a book open in front of him. The Sick Bag Song – a new collection from Nick Cave. He hoped it might jump start some inspiration. Except it didn’t.
Within fifteen minutes, however, his resolve was broken. Yes, he was still reading. But there was a bottle of fine red wine beside him. Not empty, yet. But it would be soon. An vaguely familiar voice called through the space, jarring Lancaster from his blurring thoughts. Michael, making himself at home. A low growl resonated in Lancaster’s chest. “You ever hear of knocking? It’s ******* grand…”
‹Michael Porter› Michael didn’t know the man well enough to gauge his overarching mood, but he wasn’t stupid. The wine, the sullen expression and the lack of warm greeting wasn’t that hard to interpret. He shrugged the coat off his shoulders, throwing it over the cases of wine which acted like small wall partitions. “Well, **** you too.” He replied, swooping to grab the neck of the open bottle, lifting it straight to his lips. Slumping himself into the matching chair he lifted a leg over the arm and pulled the lever pushing his other leg into the air. He was lucky the damn chair didn’t eject him backwards onto his head. Of course, now that he’d found the poor ********, Michael had no idea what to say next.
‹Lancaster dArtois› Normally, Lancaster enjoyed the company. If it were anyone else, he'd have been overjoyed that someone had sought him out. The email he'd sent to Skylar had still gone unanswered, and he didn't have it in him to go hunt down someone he assumed didn't want to see him. Why Michael? Why now? What the **** did he want? Lancaster watched with disdain as the thrall took the wine away. It probably wasn't a good thing, that Lancaster felt that twitch of rage. "What are you doing here, Michael? What do you want?" he asked. It had never crossed his mind to ask the thrall if he'd been in contact with Pi. It never even registered, that Pi would talk to her thrall, and not the man who was basically, for all intents and purposes, her husband.
‹Michael Porter› “I joined a club.” He replied, staring anywhere but at the man who was sending invisible ‘**** off’ vibes at him from the other chair. As far as starting points go, it was a random one but it made a sort of mad sense to him. He hadn’t really thought too far into the future when he’d gone into that warehouse. But it seemed like a good thing to confess to the other dude in this equation. Maybe he’d understand the madness of his actions. Or maybe he’d think Michael was a damn idiot. “I thought it would bring her back… but… yeah….” Snorting at his own stupidity Michael took another gulp of the wine. He let the open bottle dangle from his loose fingertips, swinging back and forth along the side of the armchair.
‹Lancaster dArtois› It didn't take much for Lancaster to lurch forward and snatch the bottle of wine back, refilling his own glass. He hadn't been drinking from the bottle. He wasn't that far down the rabbit hole yet, tonight. "I'm not going to sit here and pine with you. Not you. You sound like you ******* love her or something, and if you tell me you do, you'd better get the **** out of my place," Lancaster said. Michael had always seemed like a whoring, no-good piece of ****. He'd seen the way the thrall was with Pi, sometimes. It grated on Lancaster's nerves. Nor was he really in the mood to hear about any 'club'. "I'm glad you've found some hobby to keep yourself occupied. You should go do that..."