Shelter – Volcano Springs

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 1,060
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Given that he was far too used to disappointing people, Goodnight was honestly a bit leery about even speaking to these gentlemen that old Sam Chisolm had sent to fetch him at first. The younger obviously had no clue who he was, and even after drinking for a few hours still hasn’t the faintest idea, and he’s surprisingly more okay with that than Billy is. God love his best friend, but he gets so goddamned insulted on his behalf.

It’s the older one, however, who he is the most wary of still.

Oh, young Faraday can keep up with any one of them for drinking; that’s pretty obvious. And as he’s gotten progressively drunker, his accent has shifted from somewhere vaguely Midwestern to slightly Irish, which is likely why he’s practically outdrinking every man in this establishment. What’s got Goodnight feeling wary and on guard is the looks the man keeps shooting his way.

They all ring of hero worship and pure want, and Goodnight has, as previously mentioned, become far too used to being a disappointment.

That does little to explain why, when it’s time to retire somewhere to sleep for that night, Billy hauls young Teddy off to his own room for the night and Goodnight allows Faraday to follow him up to the one he’s been staying in alone, rooms being in short supply in a tiny place like Volcano Springs. So many people think that he and Billy are… closer than what they are, and there was a time he would have liked to invite the other into his bed. His best friend, however, is tragically only attracted to women, and he is likely to slip away sometime in the wee hours to visit his favorite girl before they leave for Junction City.

And he has no excuse for not telling Faraday that they were only going to be sleeping in this room, no excuse for not pushing the younger man away when he presses him against the door once it’s shut and kisses him before he can even say a word. He has no excuse for not saying that this is a bad idea… because it will only lead to bad feelings later, when the younger asks if he can have him tonight. He has no excuse for saying yes instead of no; and when later comes, he knows he won’t blame Faraday in the least for any negative reactions.

Goodnight decides somewhere between their clothing hitting the floor and his back hitting the bed that he isn’t going to worry about what will come tomorrow or the day after that or the day after that. Tonight, he is just going to live in the moment; he is going to let himself have one good thing before his old friend drags him into a war that isn’t his to fight, a war he isn’t even sure he can fight, and just hope that Faraday doesn’t hate himself too much when the disappointing truth comes out.

He’d much rather have the man hate him instead. And it likely will come to that.

For now, though, he’ll take this moment and keep it in his heart. He has so little good to keep him going and hopefully being fucked into the mattress will help him get some sleep tonight.

And, if he’s going to be even a little honest with himself, he knew from the second Faraday had him against the door that he wouldn’t regret giving in. It’s been too long since he’s let himself have something even remotely good, since he’s let himself relax and give control over to another person, that he can’t risk losing the chance. Especially when Faraday has been nothing that he deserves: gentle even while using his height and weight advantage to pin him in place, speaking softly as if afraid to ruin the moment, almost hesitant while they work to strip one another bare.

The sex… it’s not bad, is the problem.

No, it’s pretty close to what Goodnight would call perfect for a first time with someone. Faraday is oddly meticulous about prep, despite how drunk the both of them really are, even with himself demanding that he’s ready, goddammit; he can handle a little pain with his pleasure. There’s still a little bite of pain when the younger man slides into him, the stretch just a bit more than what he was ready for, and it drags a soft whine from him. Faraday doesn’t pound him into the mattress like he was expecting, just keeps at a steady, almost too slow pace that nearly drives him mad.

It’s been far too long since slow and careful was the order of the day; during the war, there wasn’t much time for stress relief so everything was hard and fast and just this side of painful. In the years since, he hasn’t much wanted anything but punishing and swift and, in more than a few cases, with an exchange of money. Goodnight has never really felt like he deserved anything that verged on careful or kind where sex is concerned.

Faraday is going to ruin him for anything aside from this, even if they keep on after tonight; this will never come again, and he can’t help but cling to it with both hands.

Literally, to be honest, as he keeps one hand clapped firmly to the younger man’s shoulder and the other pressed to the small of his back, gasping and offering praise that shifts from English to French and back again as his lover fucks into him again and again and again.

He bites his tongue when he comes, and for a moment, he laments that it’s over. Then Faraday moves to kiss him again and keeps taking him, and Goodnight prays to a God he’s long ceased to believe in that he can hold onto this moment for as long as it will last. He has no doubts that the next few days will change things for the worse, because that is how his luck goes, so he will take what he has now and lock it away to keep for the rest of his life.

If his luck finally changes for the better, that won’t be very much longer at all, and he can have something good to take with him to the other side.

[section=Footer Notes]01 June 2017

Well, we were more or less dared to go ahead and share some of this hot mess… so we are! I am so, so sorry.[endsection]

Wicked Ones – 11

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 5,470
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Goodnight had been giving him strange looks most of the afternoon, and frankly… Well, Joshua wasn’t too sure he knew what to think about the matter. He had a sneaking suspicion that, even earlier today, he probably would have been pretty pissed off.

Right now? Right now he had no damn idea what to think… or feel… or much of anything.

He hadn’t really had much to contribute to the plotting out of their defenses. Hell, it was probably the quietest he had been since signing up for this suicide mission.

And all of this just drove home the point that had been circulating through his head for hours. Well, a few of the thoughts that had been circulating through his head. First and foremost was that Vas had apparently managed to kiss him stupid, and he was fine with that… for the most part.

Oh, he was good with the kissing. He was really good with the kissing. Nobody who kissed like that should ever be allowed to be shy about it. But then again, he was pretty damn sure he didn’t want Vas kissing anyone but him and he certainly wasn’t entertaining any notions of kissing anyone else himself, so that was all a bit of a moot point.

Nope, it was the kissing him stupid that gave him pause. Like Vas himself, he stayed alive by keeping his wits about him.

But that also brought him around to that second point that he couldn’t seem to shake: right now, he really fucking missed his big brother. Right now, he could really use some damn advice, and of course, right now he couldn’t talk to Goody, exactly when he needed to the most. Goodnight. Whatever.

Honestly, right now, he didn’t care about the name. He didn’t care about the fight eight years ago. He didn’t care about what happened in Carson City just under two years ago or about what the news of it had prompted him to do only earlier this year. He didn’t care about the fight they’d had in Volcano Springs or all the bad blood they’d built back up between then and now.

No, he didn’t give a good god damn about any of that. He just wanted his brother back.

It hadn’t been a stretch to say that he had fucked his fair share of men. While he was different from his brother in that he also found certain ladies attractive, he had known most of his life that he generally preferred the company of men. There was something indescribable but attractive about someone taller than him, a hard body, a cock in his mouth, someone who could hold him down and fuck him, someone he could fuck in turn.

But that had all it had ever been through the years: fucking. If he had ever fucked the same man twice, it had been completely by drunken accident.

Feelings, though? Feelings were a whole new thing. He wasn’t sure what to do with feelings.

He could probably muddle through this on his own—and mess everything up like he always did and likely ruin any chance he had ever had with Vasquez. For that matter, they’d probably all end up shot dead in a couple of days’ time.

Maybe when all of this was over, he could give another try at making peace with his brother after all. He still wanted it to be Goodnight making the effort and coming to him, but beggars couldn’t be choosers, after all.

And he strongly suspected that, were he not standing standing where he was, some of this probably wouldn’t be occurring to him. Even before it was a charred ruin, Emmanuel’s Church hadn’t been the kind of church he’d grown up in. It wasn’t the St. Martin of Tours Cathedral back in St. Martinville… or even a Catholic Church for that matter. He’d been to Mass exactly once since he and Goody had parted ways, and that hadn’t been an experience he wanted to repeat.

Now…

“At least we won’t have to go too far to pray for forgiveness,” he commented idly. Passing the time, really, was all that it was, for all that he was still looking the place over, checking to see if the building was even half as structurally sound as they needed it to be. Despite the very obvious damage, it looked like it might well be. If they shored it up with sandbags, it might well be a good place to launch the main defense of the town; everyone entering the town would like have to go right by the church.

Somehow, even the steeple seemed relatively intact. Goodnight was still up there, checking sight lines maybe, but Rocks had wandered off. He could see the man outside the far windows.

“There you go. But there’s no forgiveness for men like you, güero,” Vasquez shot back, and damn it, he couldn’t help the answering smile, even as Vas snickered.

“Don’t call me güero,” he returned and tried hard to sound annoyed. He got the feeling he was failing miserably. “What’s ‘güero’ mean anyway? Handsome? Debonair?”

It was only half-teasing. His Spanish was passable a lot of days. He could definitely get by on it. If nothing else, he could make himself understood and get the gist of what was being said to him in return. But there were a lot of words he didn’t know… or words in English that had several of varying meanings in Spanish… or words in Spanish that sounded way too similar but meant very different things, like ‘chivato’ and ‘chingado’, a difference that had nearly gotten him shot at least once.

“Yeah, something like that.” A grin and a wink accompanied the words. Okay, yeah, this was fun, he thought to himself, returning the wink. Fighting not to smile was one of the hardest things he’d ever done.

But then Sam Chisolm had to ruin it by pointedly clearing his throat, following that immediately up with an equally sharp “Gentlemen… Now is not the time for this.”

The scowl Vasquez shot the older man was impressively dark. He imagined he looked no more pleased than the Mexican did—and he was probably doing a worse job of hiding that fact.

Granted, he felt a bit like he had been caught doing something he shouldn’t have when Goodnight finally dropped the last few feet out of the steeple. The rope Rocks had strung up apparently hadn’t been quite long enough to ease all the way down, thus necessitating the drop, but it was that same undefinable look Goodnight had been giving him most of the afternoon that made him feel almost guilty.

No, now that he thought about it, maybe it wasn’t the best idea to wait until this was over to try to patch things up with Goodnight. There was no guarantee that they would live through it, after all; he was the one that kept thinking of the whole thing as a suicide run, as a point of fact.

He didn’t want to die without at least trying—really trying—to make peace with his brother. He didn’t want to chance Goodnight dying without knowing how sorry Joshua was for everything: the fight, the words he’d said, the punches he’d thrown both eight years ago and only a few days past, Carson City, all the letters he had sent over the years… everything.

That conversation couldn’t be tonight, though; there just wasn’t going to be enough time. Tomorrow morning, he and Vasquez were going to start putting out explosives, and he couldn’t put that off, not in good conscience. Maybe tomorrow afternoon, everything permitting.

He would find a way. He would make time if he had to. The trick would be getting Goodnight willing to stay in the same room as him long enough for him to say what he needed to.

And he’d have to be careful about it, because cornering Goodnight could end up leading to a confrontation with Rocks that he would really rather avoid. That he had managed not to get into one so far was enough of a surprise. No sense pushing his luck. He didn’t want to test his hungover quickdraw reflexes against Rocks’ knives. He had a pretty good feeling which would win… and it probably wouldn’t be him.

Put another way, if it came down to him and Rocks, he would be having Vas put money down on Rocks.

He tore his eyes away from his brother, giving the wooden floorboards a hard glare for a long moment or two rather than let his brother think it was directed at him, before he finally spoke again. “Compared to the rest of the place, this might be our best spot to try to hold the town. The main road in comes right past here, there are enough windows that we can board up and use as defense, and it’s not far from here to any other strategic place in town.”

Vas shrugged. “Good a place as any for a last stand.”

Out of the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Goodnight twitch, the movement just so slight that he couldn’t be sure if it had been real or Joshua’s imagination.

Rather than comment on that, though, and risk starting more shit than he wanted to deal with right now, he took a step closer to Vasquez, one that would take him close enough to brush his hand against the other man’s. “We’ll make it as defensible as possible first. No need to go calling it a last stand yet, Vas.” It was as close to comforting as he had come in years, maybe since before the War, but at least it seemed to have worked, if the small wry grin he received was anything to go by.

Goodnight, on the other hand, turned on his heel and stalked back out of the church without ever having said a word to him. And wasn’t that becoming about typical these days?

No, he would have to be careful in doing this, but he was going to be having a long conversation with his brother… and it would be before Bart Bogue come back to this town. It would happen if he had to steal Vasquez’s rope, tie Goodnight to a damn chair, and lock Rocks in a separate room.

Instead he settled for glaring at Chisolm until the man left him and Vas alone in the church. From here, he couldn’t tell if Chisolm was following Goodnight or not. As long, calloused fingers wrapped around his own, he was particularly certain he cared. He did have to make a token attempt at grousing with, “I’m really starting to hate that man.”

“I think, tomorrow, we can tie some of that dynamite to his horse’s tail.”

The words startled a laugh out of him, loud and amused, like he couldn’t remember being in forever. And yeah, Joshua liked that part about being with Vas too.


 If he was honest with himself—and let’s face it, he hadn’t been that since this whole show of Chisolm’s kicked off—he would admit that his little brother’s silence was somewhat troubling.

It had started sometime after they got back from the mining camp in the early afternoon. Up until then, Joshua had almost been frightfully gleeful over the prospect of rigging explosives. He had all but dragged Vasquez off to begin plotting out where to begin before the group as a whole set out to see what should be set up where.

Then…

Then when it was time to set off, his contrary brother was silent and almost shy, which was a word never associated with Joshua Robicheaux in his entire life. And trying to see if Vasquez had any insight was a joke, given that he was also playing at bashful, shooting coy little glances at Joshua as the group planned on the move.

And for the life of him, Goodnight was only coming up with one poorly timed conclusion: these two idiots had chosen now, in the middle of planning a war where they might not make it out, to go and fall in love with one another.

Sure, they had to have been fucking since just outside Junction City; the sexual tension was so thick you could practically taste it. He and Billy had actually rolled their eyes on the first night in town upon realizing the boys had separate rooms; they weren’t fooling anyone. But Goody knew better than anyone how hard it was to go from fucking to love, even if he’d taken longer than his brother to get to that point.

Frankly, he and Billy had started fucking right after their first major fight about Joshua. And it had been a few months before Goodnight realized he’d fallen hard for the other man. The only saving grace there was that Billy was smarter than him and already come to that conclusion; it made things both easier and more terrifying. Even now, years into their relationship, he found himself looking to his lover to take the lead on certain things… although sometimes he didn’t exactly listen.

Such as, not staying in Carson City nearly two years ago once they’d been jumped was his own decision. Billy had wanted to stick around another week, had even been ready to either rent the room for longer or move to a camp site just outside the town where they could watch everyone’s comings and goings, but Goody had been adamant about leaving.

Now, he wondered if maybe things would be different now, had he just listened to the smarter of the pair of them.

But that was a thought for another time. Right now, he was checking the floor to the steeple to make sure that the damned thing wouldn’t collapse out from under him during the battle that was to come. It really was the best spot in town for a sniper’s nest: there were clear lines of sight from all sides, looking over the town itself, all possible means of entering or leaving, and the fields directly behind where Bogue’s men might just be coming in from. He should be able to provide cover for any and all potential problems, and even though he knew that he’d have nightmares just thinking about it, he also knew it was the perfect spot to make a final stand if it came down to that.

Goodnight did his best to not be too pessimistic, but he knew himself too well. He had no real plans of surviving this ordeal; he just wanted to make sure that his loved ones made it through. Somewhere along the way, that number had moved to include Vasquez solely because Joshua was so damned smitten. With a little bit of skill and luck, he should be able to make it so that his boys walked away.

From the church below, he could hear his brother and the outlaw flirting again, for the love of all things holy. It was actually sort of sweet, but the timing was shitty as hell. And then he heard Chisolm scolding the pair of them and all but rolled his eyes to the heavens. Seriously, waiting for the other shoe to drop, for the damned Yank to just up and admit that he was finally cashing in that favor Goodnight owed him—and honestly, when a man said I owe you one to the person who’d just kept him from being beaten to death, the proper response was you don’t owe me anything or let me buy you a drink, not ten years of sitting on the damned thing!—before he snapped was trying as all hell.

Goodnight rubbed wearily at his eyes and looked out over the town again. There were a ton of excellent sight lines up here, and it was the perfect spot to give advanced warning when Bogue’s army arrived as well as keep an eye on the other shooters’ locations throughout the town. He still wasn’t sure about putting a man on the livery’s roof, but if anyone could keep their balance up there, it would be a valid spot as well.

He spotted Billy doing a walk along the road, checking for any additional sites to set up traps or surprises, and smiled slightly. There was so much to do, so little damned time to do it in, and he was not getting nearly enough sleep to deal with everything. Hopefully, he wasn’t keeping his Billy up as well.

Goodnight could still hear his brother and the other men talking in the church below, although he couldn’t hear exactly what they were discussing; he’d let his mind wander enough to be completely lost as to the conversation, but the tone was not a pleased one by any means. Rather than stay hiding up in the steeple and hope they would all forget he was up there, the man made his way down carefully; he kept a hand on the rope that Billy had strung up to make for an easier time climbing up and down, but took the stairs as far as he was able. When he ran out of solid wood, Goodnight swung himself onto the rope and slid down.

Given that the rope was a little bit shorter than was fully helpful, Goody let go of the rope and dropped the remaining few feet to the floor. He didn’t mean to land practically in front of his brother—mostly because he hadn’t realized the younger man was that close—but he made an effort not to flinch back either. And yep, Joshua still had that love-struck look on his face; it still left him puzzled to see it for how new a look on the younger man it was, and he probably had an odd expression of his own as he continued to muse on how bad this timing really was.

Then his brother dropped his gaze to the floorboard, glaring as if it was offending him in some way. That was another issue that would have to be addressed, because it was all but killing him to not talk to his brother the way he wanted to. Every bit of body language said clearly that Joshua both did and did not want to spend any time around him, but Goodnight was getting fed up with ignoring what he himself wanted.

He wanted to try to reconcile, and his little brother was just going to have to learn to live with that. It would have to be sometime soon, before Bogue arrived, but they would be having a talk. Today was already far too busy to slip in another fight with his only living relative, so it would need to be sometime in the next couple of days. Tomorrow itself was going to be busy, what with everyone working to get started given the little time allowed for the town to be ready, but they would have to stop to eat sometime. Maybe he could catch Joshua off-guard around breakfast time the day after… if he could drag the boy away from Vasquez for five goddamn minutes.

Billy could probably help with that, actually. Given that he was slowly but surely getting fed up with Goody’s own maudlin reactions to Joshua’s hot and cold manner, his lover would leap at the opportunity to get them talking to one another without punches getting thrown.

“Compared to the rest of this place,” his brother said after trying to set the floor ablaze with his glare, “this might be our best spot to try to hold the town. The main road in comes right past here, there are enough windows that we can board up and use as defense, and it’s not far from here to any other strategic place in town.”

It was a solid strategy, sound and well thought-out. Goodnight had honestly been thinking along similar lines himself, adding in that he could probably hit every target coming his way from the safety of the steeple. They would need to board it up some, of course, and get some sandbags up there as well as in the sanctuary itself. But still, a very strategic location, and one he would have gladly taken advantage of during the war had such a spot been available.

Then Vasquez spoke up to offer his opinion, and it was one the Cajun had been trying to avoid thinking of in connection with his baby brother: “Good a place as any for a last stand.”

He couldn’t quite control the twitch at that, but he hoped he’d disguised it enough for the others to avoid comment. It was possible that his brother had at least noticed although he didn’t say anything; instead, he moved a little closer to the outlaw, just close enough to “accidentally” brush against the other man’s hand with his own. It was a subtle show of comfort, one that was sharply familiar from their shared childhood. There were far too many times when his T-Jo had been the one in need to comfort, thanks to their bastard father, and there were more than a few times wherein Goodnight had needed that care which his younger brother had willingly given.

It was a bit much, however, to deal with in the moment. He turned on his heel and headed out the door, intending to track down Billy and see about dragging him away for a moment or two to just try and get his head back on straight. Behind him, he could hear Joshua’s voice as he reassured Vasquez:

“We’ll make it as defensible as possible first. No need to go calling it a last stand yet, Vas.”

He shook his head, a small smile crossing his lips. Trust his brother to try and comfort a man by saying they would do their best to not die. Granted, his Billy had done similar more than a few times in the past; more than once, he had offered to stay awake and ‘fight that damned owl’ just to get him to relax enough to go back to sleep after a nightmare.

“Goody?”

Oh, wonderful. Just what he didn’t need: Sam Chisolm following him and using his nickname without permission.

There were only two people who, at any given point in his life, he had let use that nickname. The first was, of course, Joshua. His little brother had given him the nickname only a few days after he’d called him T-Jo aloud for the first time, and up until their fight eight years ago, he had been the only person in the world to call him that.

The other was, unsurprisingly, Billy. That had not come about nearly as easily; in fact, the first time his lover had called him that was a little over seven years ago, months after their fight over whether he should try contacting Joshua and when they likewise started fucking. It was right around the time he’d realized that he was falling in love with the man, and the shortened version of his name had slipped from Billy while they were ‘discussing’ the outcome of a quick draw competition wherein the Korean had nearly been shot.

Goodnight and Billy both had frozen the second the nickname was out, although Billy was quick to apologize. Goody himself had blinked a few times, debating on whether he was pissed off that someone other than his brother had shortened his name in that way—after all, Maman and Monsieur Robicheaux had always called him by his given name, while Colette had called him G’night—or pleased that someone he was beginning to care about deeply was comfortable enough to even unconsciously shorten his name to something more affectionate.

He had decided on being pleased and had pulled his lover into bed to show him just how okay he was with the new change in their life together.

Shaking off the more pleasant memories, Goodnight turned to give Chisolm an expectant look. The other man frowned at him, but his face was still closed off and difficult to read.

Rather than react to the bland look Goodnight was giving him, Chisolm simply asked, “You okay? Given how things are between the pair of you, after all.”

Goodnight nodded, hoping that the Yank would get to the point soon.

“All right.” The other man paused a moment before adding, “If you need some time or anything, a mediator—”

Nope, that was all the conversation he felt like having with Chisolm at the moment.

“It’ll be fine, Sam,” Goodnight cut him off. “We’re both grown men; we can deal with our issues. Now, if you’ll excuse me?” He tipped his hat and turned to set off down the street again, spotting Billy coming out of the alley by the general store. Goodnight started walking quickly, catching up to his lover in short order and huffing out a sigh.

Billy gave him a look out of the corner of his eye. “Too much friendliness?” he asked wryly, causing Goody to chuckle. His cher really, really did not care for Sam Chisolm. The only way he could be more apparent about it was if he took to stabbing a knife into the table at the start of every meal.

“You could say that,” he replied. “Done scouting out where to dig?” At Billy’s nod, he smiled warmly. “Good. I was thinking that a bath and some good bourbon would be nice right about now. Care to join me in one or both of those?”

The Korean grinned back at him. “I’ll see about turning up some hot water if you get us a bottle and some glasses.”

“Deal.” They sealed the bargain with a quick kiss—right in the middle of the street. He honestly didn’t care what these people thought of it: they were just paying them to save their sorry hides and would likely not lynch the people who were all that stood between them and the death of their town. Then Goodnight started towards the boarding house.

A break would be very nice right now, and they could get back to planning afterward.


 Sam Chisolm wouldn’t call himself a bad man, although he would say he was one with a questionable moral code.

Right now, however, he was giving real thought to strangling a pair of idiot brothers who were feuding over God only knows what.

The whole time they’d been together, the Robicheaux boys had been vexing him. It had started back in Amador City when he’d crossed paths with young Joshua for the first time in a couple months, just as mean as any other time they’d met since whatever fight had split the once-inseparable brothers up. Still, when Miss Emma and Teddy Q had approached him, brought him the chance at Bogue, the first man he thought of to join them was Joshua.

And while he’d been leery of doing so, Sam had opted to send the younger brother to fetch the elder. He wanted Vasquez’s insight on things, a more criminal mind to catch things his own need to attempt upholding the law would cause him to miss, and he didn’t entirely trust Joshua to not scare the man further into the mountains.

He had regretted that decision when the damned boys rode into their base camp outside Junction City both looking like they’d been in a fight, while Teddy and Goodnight’s… friend were unscathed.

And on the topic of said friend, Billy Rocks was obvious in his dislike of Sam. True, he didn’t always make the best impression on folks, but the hostility he sensed from the Oriental man was unprecedented. As soon as he figured out exactly what he’d done in a past life to draw this man’s ire, he was planning to apologize profusely.

When he’d told Joshua his deal with Vasquez, that he wasn’t planning to collect on the bounty, he’d meant it as a peace offering: if Joshua intended to get the bounty, he wouldn’t stand in the way. So of course the little shit has been contrary and offered the outlaw the exact same deal. Never had Sam known the younger Robicheaux to give up a potential pay day, but he’d done just that.

But for whatever goddamn reason, that had served to set Goodnight into a silent sulk, ending with the elder brother stalking off and taking a ten minute break to do whatever before returning with a pleasant mask on and a stark refusal to say anything of substance.

Then, after they’d rounded up the last of their group in Old Jack Horne and Red Harvest, they’d arrived in Rose Creek, and those two idiots just. Kept. Frustrating him at every turn. First was the opening skirmish, wherein Joshua goaded Goodnight until he took a shot at the retreating Blackstone, then they had a quickly hissed argument about that.

Every meal was an adventure in a bad way, with Sam just waiting for the impending explosion. Any time the brothers somehow forgot that they were pissed at one another, they seemed to be just the same as they’d been back when he first met them almost ten years ago. They’d both make cracks about something, share a moment of amusement… and then snap right back to being surly or sulky.

That was about the only thing he and Billy Rocks seemed to agree on; he had more than once seen the man shooting annoyed looks at both of the boys and probably wishing to lock them in a goddamn room until they worked their shit out.

So it was an act of desperation that lead to Sam slipping into the room Goodnight was sharing with the other man—and he wasn’t one to judge how a man lived his life; it had been the reason he’d even met Goodnight, keeping a group of former Blues from beating the man to death for the crime of looking at one of them a moment too long, and he had never breathed a work of it to anyone—and rifling through their saddle bags, hoping to find something that could be used to make the brothers reconcile. He’d come up with an unopened letter addressed to his friend and a journal filled with entries written in French.

Honestly, he must’ve gone slightly mad, given that he actually took the items and tucked them away in his own saddle bags before heading to join the rest of the group for breakfast before the first day of attempting to get the townsfolk into fighting form.

And those damned boys got into it. Again. Right in front of most of the men in Rose Creek.

Thankfully things seemed somewhat back on an even keel when it came time to raid the mining camp. Granted, Goodnight had shot down the Blackstones with a vengeance that was nothing short of unnerving, but it had been good to have the enemy dealt with in such short order. And a quick late afternoon walk of the town had kept the brothers from sniping at one another… although once again in the church they’d slipped back to that not communicating with one another bullshit. Hell, Joshua had taken a moment to glare at the ground and Goodnight stalked out not five minutes later.

God damn those brats. If he ever met whoever screwed the two of them up so badly, he was gonna put a bullet in ’em; sadly, he felt that he was too late for that, if the person behind that had been a parent.

Which brought them to yet another awkward dinner. Two nights in town, and Sam was ready to strangle the pair of them. Joshua and Vasquez were seated next to each other as was the new normal, making cow eyes at one another and falling in love at the worse possible time; Goodnight was seated practically across from them giving them a look that spoke of confusion and support even though they still weren’t talking to one another. Jack had apparently given up on the lot of them, focusing on his meal and talking politely with the widowed Leni, while Red was determinedly not touching a thing on his plate.

Frankly, Sam was at the end of his rope. Come morning, when the lovebirds were out setting explosives, he was going to raid the younger Robicheaux boy’s room and see if there was anything there to use as a catalyst to make these idiots talk. If he made himself into the bad guy in the process… well, so be it. It would hardly be the first time he put his self-preservation instincts aside for his friends.

[section=Footer Notes]11 March 2017

And here’s a nice long chapter for you guys. It’s been a bit of ride so far, and we’re only about halfway through what’s written of the story. Hope you guys enjoy.

Part 1 is me, while parts 2 and 3 are Katsuko. We’ve got three different POVs in this, one of which is new for the story.

Well, we did promise some reveals in this chapter. We’ve got the Chisolm reveal we’ve been promising in reviews for a while now. It’s still actually the same Sam Chisolm. Just we’re seeing everything through the perspectives of some rather… unreliable narrators. He’s the same Sam Chisolm; it’s just that these boys don’t deal well with Sam’s particular brand of forcing the issue.

But someone’s gotta, am I right?

Hope you guys enjoy!
~Adora[endsection]

Wicked Ones: The Early Years – 05 – Mardi Gras

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 820
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

The worst beating Goodnight took in the time between his thirteenth birthday and when he was forced by Monsieur Robicheaux into the Confederate army at eighteen was after the Mardi Gras party when he was fifteen. And while he wasn’t happy that it had happened, Goodnight was glad that he’d kept Letty and T-Jo’s part of the events leading up to it a secret.

Thank God he’d already changed out of the chartreuse monstrosity of a dress Letty had loaned him, or else she might have received a beating of her own. Although Goodnight still thought that the old bastard had known that the girl was keeping his attention away from where the eldest child was… entertaining one of their guests in a more private setting.

T-Jo’s role had been to give an early warning just in case Letty failed at keeping their parents—but especially Monsieur Robicheaux—distracted, and thankfully he hadn’t had to do so. And Goodnight had been able to enjoy the festivities, find a young man with similar leanings as his own—granted, said young man was a man of twenty-three who was just passing through town, the cousin of one of Letty’s town friends—and enjoy a few hours of being doted upon, pampered, and losing his virginity.

Again, thank God that T-Jo had been down the hall and not right outside his rooms. His brother was too young to go hearing that sort of thing.

But somehow, Monsieur Robicheaux had found out. Either Marcel had not been half as stealthy leaving the Robicheaux home as he’d been entering the upstairs during the party with Goodnight—and that had been very interesting, sneaking through the halls in a gown, corset, and heels—or one of the slaves had been ‘convinced’ to tell the old bastard what he or she had seen during the evening, but Goodnight had been finishing up in preparing for bed when the man burst into his room and grabbed him by the hair.

He was just glad the bastard had dragged him down the hall to the upstairs study rather than beating the shit out of him in his own bedroom; he never would have been able to sleep there again.

And it had been one hell of a beating, one that seemed to go on for hours even though no more than ten minutes could have passed during it or else someone—likely Maman—would have come looking for the bastard. Worse than the physical blows, worse than the cracked ribs that Nana Jolie had had to wrap for him, worse still than the dark bruises that took forever to fade from his arms and face, were the words Monsieur Robicheaux had spat at him. Every single derogatory word in his vocabulary regarding people with the same bent leanings as Goodnight, every insult growled in disgust, every accusing thought of Maman having an affair with Uncle Dempsey—his mother’s oldest friend and one of the few men in the world that the children felt safe being around—with Goodnight himself being the result, ending with a solemn vow that he would kill him if he ever caught him with a man, that he would be married off to some society belle when he was of age or that he would be cast out for good.

That, Goodnight couldn’t allow. If he was gone, who would keep T-Jo and Letty safe?

He had made a solemn promise to himself that he would do whatever it took to keep his younger siblings as safe and as happy as possible, even if that meant running away with the both of them.

Somehow he had managed to drag himself back down the hall to his room, where T-Jo was already waiting nervously inside. He had been the one to run for Nana Jolie, had been the one to hold his hand as he bit back whimpers of pain as the aging woman tended to his injuries as best she could. It had been T-Jo who carefully climbed into bed next to him, pressing a kiss to his unbruised cheek and offering a watery smile.

“S’okay, Goody,” he said quietly, ever aware that the bastard was always around. “It’s okay. You just sleep now. I’ll protect you.”

And that was how it was: the brothers protecting each other and Letty as best they could, every single day up until the horrible day he’d left to go to war. Which, in all honesty, was yet another way to keep the younger children—although not so much children any longer, with Letty a beauty at seventeen and T-Jo himself already eleven—safe from harm. After all, if Monsieur Robicheaux was distracted by the ‘glory’ of war, then he couldn’t do any damage to the two children still in St. Martinville.

And with any luck, the old bastard would die soon enough and Goodnight could go back home.

[section=Footer Notes]10 March 2017

Again, I am so, so sorry.

I can honestly say that it’s my favorites that I tend to torment the most, so I must love Goodnight a hell of a lot, huh?

And for those who follow me and Adora on Tumblr? This chapter is one of those spots where we’ve created an AU of the AU. I was actually working on that a little bit before midnight while waiting for it to be time for posting this segment. It’ll be some time before that sees an appearance on here, however, even if we share a teaser at some point.

~Adora & Katsuko[endsection]

After Midnight – 13 – Baby Demon Sitting

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 1,271
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Sam Chisolm was beginning to think this might be a bad idea.

Faraday had come to him ranting about how none of the men in town knew their right from their left, and the ones that did were like to drop dead at the first loud noise. He had very diplomatically not said anything to the Fae regarding the fact that he looked to have been a bit… nibbled on in spots, by something with sharp teeth, only nodded along sympathetically and hoped that this wouldn’t become a major issue.

Then came Vasquez, mostly to complain that he was still hungry and that he was going to try helping with rebuilding the church. Apparently, he found hard work relaxing or some such thing. Likely not as relaxing as nibbling on certain Fae, but he said nothing about that, either.

Then came Billy, his secret weapon, to beg a favor that nearly left him scratching his head.

Honestly, Sam was going to re-evaluate his life choices sometime soon.

“You want us to do what?” Faraday asked loudly.

“Make sure Goody doesn’t shoot anyone during rifle training,” Billy repeated.

“I did not sign up for baby demon sitting.”

Sam sighed. “I know demons can be a bit,” he paused, searching for a diplomatic way to phrase the thought, “hot-headed. But I strongly doubt he’d intentionally kill someone if they annoy him.”

Billy heaved a weary sigh; Sam could hear his feathers ruffle even though he didn’t see the wings. “Lucifer put a curse on Goody’s weapons,” he blurted out. “Actually, he put the same curse on both Goody’s and Ezekiel’s guns. Whenever they shoot someone, if it’s a kill shot, the victim goes straight to hell.”

Well… that was a little extreme.

Faraday frowned. “I thought hell was just where demons lived,” he said. “Why would Luke want humans in his house?”

Sam randomly wondered just how many beings Faraday could give a nickname to whether he’d ever met them or not.

“Because his kids are spoiled? I don’t know,” the angel replied with a shrug. “Just… don’t let him kill anyone if at all possible. Please?”

Given that he thought it would be an easy task, Sam agreed; Faraday huffed but ultimately agreed as well.

And then they got to the makeshift range to find their resident, literal hellspawn already in high dudgeon.

“Let’s see if y’all’ve learned anything,” Goody drawled, eyes flashing white. “Fire!”

And… God damn but that was pathetic. Not one shot hit any of the six targets, and one man even fell over from the recoil on his rifle.

Faraday muttered… something in a language that wasn’t the Monster Tongue but also wasn’t in anything approaching English.

“Reload,” Goody ordered. “Y’all are startin’ to piss me off.”

Next to Sam, the Fae leaned over and said, “Statistically speaking, monster hunter, they should have hit something.”

Meanwhile, Goody was still talking to the men on the gun line. “How many times have I gotta tell you to keep that knee up under you? Schoolteacher, take that hat off your head.” He added something in the monster language, which caused Faraday to snort in amusement, and Sam honestly didn’t want to know. “Teddy, I expect better from you, son. The recoil is not to be shunned, it’s to be absorbed.”

“I ain’t shunning a damned thing, sir,” Teddy replied, his tone almost a snap. Faraday stood up a bit straighter, eyes widening and a smile crossing his lips; apparently, he enjoyed how the halfling was back-talking the demon.

Goody, on the other hand, did not look terribly amused. “Are you trying to make me mad?” he asked evenly. “Is that what’s—”

Right about that point, one of the men—Sam thought his name was Phillip or something to that effect—fired off his rifle apparently by accident. If nothing else, it served to distract the Antichrist from biting Teddy’s head off.

“That’s the second time for you,” Goody drawled, and Sam saw him reaching for the revolver on his hip.

“Goodnight,” the Fae nearly snapped. The demon responded to the tone by letting his hand fall away from the weapon automatically, and Sam was grateful to not get a demonstration on how, exactly, those cursed weapons worked.

Instead of shooting, Goody took a step back and said, “Go make me some eggs.”

“Sorry, the damned hammer—” Phillip started to say, only to be interrupted.

“No, I don’t wanna hear it. Have a nice afternoon.” Goody waited for the man to get to his feet, eyes fading to blue again in spite of the fact that the business end of the rifle swung around towards him. “You gonna point that thing at me?”

Phillip didn’t try to argue the point, instead ducking his head and heading back towards the town. Faraday called out for him to leave the rifle, even as his gaze remained locked on the training session.

Goody tried to, once again, impart a little bit of wisdom onto the firing line—telling the men to be gentle with their hands, to let the shot surprise them—before ordering them to fire one more time. Unfortunately, the new advice didn’t do much to help, given that once more not a damned bullet made it into a target.

“I am in awe,” the demon said, eyes shifting back to white again, “that this many men can miss that many targets. Twice. I’m looking at a line of dead men.”

Faraday shook his head. “Seriously, monster hunter, how the hell are we gonna pull this off?”

Goody’s shout actually made both Sam himself and the Fae jump: “You have to hate what you are shooting at! Hate it! Get some gravel in your craw! Come on! God damn sons of bitches!”

“Wow,” Faraday whistled. “He’s definitely pissed if’n he’s calling on Yahweh.” With that, he pushed himself off the fence and called out, “Maybe these men need a demonstration.”

Goody looked over. “Really, Faraday?” he asked. “Don’t you think we need the lead?”

“Come on,” the Fae insisted before turning to the men on the line. “This demon has twenty-three confirmed kills at Antietam. The humans dubbed him the Angel of Death. Do what he does. He’s a legend, for the gods’ sake.” Then Faraday turned to the demon and added something in the monster tongue. Whatever it was, it caused Goody’s lip to curl into a snarl, caused him to snatch the rifle.

The demon then turned towards the targets, aimed with ease, and fired six consecutive shots directly into the neck of one of them. The head fell off with the final shot, and Goody turned around to smirk at Faraday before tossing the rifle at him and stalking back towards town.

Sam found himself grinning a bit; apparently the Fae had just been shot at in effigy, and the demon was enough of a little shit that he knew Faraday knew.

“Told you,” the Fae said at last, directing the words towards the farmers. “Why don’t y’all go home and polish your rifles? Maybe the glint will scare them off. Or draw any Fae in close enough that you can actually manage to shoot ‘em.”

The hunter shook his head, still amused at the antics of both older and younger monster. Hopefully this group would start to mesh sooner rather than later, but for the moment, he could let any antagonism slide.

Besides, he had a plan for something that could turn the tides in their favor. He just had to get the lot of them to agree that liberating the mining camp was in their best interest.

[section=Footer Notes]08 March 2017

Sam would like to know where he can trade in his obviously defective monsters. Because they are clearly insane, every last one of them.

Running monster tally:

Emma Cullen – one quarter Changeling (on her father’s side)
Bartholomew Bogue – warlock uppity witch Uppity witch
McCann – hedge witch
Denali – skin-walker
Teddy Q – half earth elemental half dryad (on his mother’s side)
Sam Chisolm – human monster hunter
Faraday – Trickster Fae A little of this, a little of that Fae something old and powerful Fae. Trickster Dammit, Faraday!
Goodnight Robicheaux – demon An Antichrist Shadow-walker Antichrist
Billy Rocks – An angel of death Air-spirit Angel of Death
Vasquez – Ancient God (Old Mexico/Aztec/Mayan) Eater of the dead Old God
Jack Horne – mostly harmless Future wendigo (currently human, haunted by helpful ghosts)
Red Harvest – shaman (in training) (currently on his monster-walk)[endsection]

Trinity – 10 – Frustration and Comfort

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 1,240
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

The next morning, the whole of the Seven set about trying to get the good people of Rose Creek ready for war.

Emphasis on trying.

By noon, Joshua was already verging on ten thousand percent done with these folks. He’d done his best to get a rifle line set up, to make things a bit easier for Goody to see what he was working with, only to discover that most of these men apparently didn’t even know their right from their left. And that wasn’t even counting the one farmer who’d arrived with a hoe rather than a rifle or the barber showing up with his goddamned straight razor in lieu of anything that might actually be useful.

Then, when he left them to go see how his other mates were doing—and feeling a little guilty for leaving his Cajun to deal with the stupid, especially when those blue eyes had given him a look screaming what fresh hell is this?—he found that Gabe had already decided the bullshit wasn’t worth it and was helping some of the ladies of Rose Creek begin on repairs to the church and that Billy was ready to stab literally everyone in the face for walking off from his knife training. Which meant that by the time he got back over to where the rifle line was set up, Joshua was not in the best of moods or tempers.

So the fact that Goody had managed to get them all lined up and set to actually hit the targets with little effort, only for every single sorry son of a bitch to miss entirely? Well, there wasn’t much to say about that.

“Jesus wept,” summed it up beautifully.

“Y’all are starting to piss me off,” Goody remarked dryly, and Joshua thought that that might also sum things up terrifically in regards to their chances. Hell, he was ready to give Jack and Adelaide and Sunset and Diablo guns, and those were their goddamned horses who might have a better shot at hitting a target.

To Sam, however, he remarked, “Statistically speaking, they should ‘a hit something.”

He listened as his Cajun berated the men, but felt himself bristling when little Teddy Q, who was likely all of a buck seventy-five soaking wet, actually snarked back at Goody. Hell, he was ready to shoot the little shit and make Miss Emma a full-on widow when whats-his-face next to him shot off his rifle for no apparent reason.

“That’s the second time for you,” Goody remarked, thoroughly unimpressed and making Joshua wonder what fuckery he’d missed while checking in on the others. “Go make me some eggs.”

“The damned hammer—”

“No, I don’t want to hear it! Have a nice afternoon,” Goody interrupted, and it was more than obvious to the Irishman that his mate was nearly as done with all this shit as he was. Joshua felt himself tensing up a bit when the man turned to leave, the barrel of the rifle facing his mate. Goody, however, apparently had balls of pure iron given that his full reaction was simply, “You gonna—you gonna point that thing at me?”

Then the Cajun tried, for what must’ve been the second or third time, to impart a little bit of wisdom on the rifle line. In his opinion, it was sound advice. To be honest, Joshua had been too young to fight in the war, even if he had devoured everything he could read on the heroes from both sides; he wasn’t great at reading, but when the subject interested him then he damned well gave it his all. Hell, he’d been a Missouri boy, could have easily fought for either side, but he’d always been a wee bit fascinated by the sharpshooters and the accounts on them.

Now that he actually had one of his very own, it was a fair bet that he’d be keeping him.

“Fire when ready,” Goody was saying to the line when he tuned back in fully, but it was followed by a snapped order when the men simply stared at him. And… for fuck’s sake, they managed to miss everything again.

“I am amazed that this many men,” his Cajun drawled, and yep, he sounded even more done than Joshua, “could miss that many targets. Twice. I am looking at a line of dead men.”

Oh, shit. That was not a happy tone, and Joshua pushed himself off the fence to go fetch his mate before he turned around and shot one of those sorry sons of bitches. He could already hear Sam chuckling at his back, and it was so tempting to turn around and hit him one, but Goody was his priority right now.

“C’mon, babe,” he said, catching hold of Goody’s arm right as he was about to lay into the whole lot of them. “Walk it off. Let’s go.”

“These men can’t hit the broad side of a barn, mon coeur,” he hissed, glaring over his shoulder at the rifle line. “And that’s from the inside.”

“I know, darlin’, I know,” Joshua said, tugging him around and wrapping an arm around his waist securely. “We’ll let Billy come yell at ‘em for a bit. Let’s go take a break.”

“Okay, but only because you asked,” Goody said, although he did glance back and snap, “Hate what you are shooting at! Hate it! Get some gravel in your craw! C’mon!” Under his breath as he turned back around, he muttered, “Goddamn sons of bitches.”

“I know, sweetheart,” the redhead replied. “They need a lot of help. We’ll get back to them later.”

“They done pissed me off.”

“I know, babe. They’re pissin’ me off, too.”

He managed to get Goody back into town without running into anyone who might just annoy the Cajun further—and he was including Miss Emma in that, given how snippy Teddy had been back there—and up to their room in the boarding house. Unsurprisingly, Billy was already there and polishing some of his knives, and he sat up abruptly from his slouch when they walked through the door.

“Who am I stabbing?” was the first thing out of his mouth, and Joshua bit back a laugh.

“Oh,” Goody drawled, “everyone. No, seriously, everyone.”

“No, babe, we ain’t killing them all,” Joshua said, shooting a look at Billy along with a firm head shake just in case his mate got any ideas in his head. The Korean rolled his eyes but made no move to actually go kill anyone. “C’mon, Goody,” he added, pushing the older man towards the bed and, when he dug in his heels, flung himself down while pulling Goody with him.

Billy put aside his knives and moved to join them, settling on the Cajun’s other side and wrapping his arms around his waist. Joshua chuckled and tugged both men in more securely, pressing a quick kiss to the top of Goody’s head. “These people are very annoying, I know,” he murmured, tucking his chin against his mate’s shoulder. “So we’re taking an hour or so to just… ignore them all. Maybe Gabe’ll come see where we all wandered off to, climb in, too.”

“Mmm, okay,” Goody sighed, relaxing little by little. “But if they don’t shape up, I’m shooting one of ‘em.”

“No, you aren’t.”

“No, you ain’t.”

Joshua grinned as he and Billy spoke in unison, grinned a bit more at Goody’s chuckle. They just needed a moment to unwind, to think on what still needed done in order to actually save this little town without risking their own lives, and then they could rejoin the world.

In a little while.

[section=Footer Notes]06 March 2017

No real translation notes this time, mostly because there’s nothing really new under the sun here.

I can say, though, that it’s nice posting on this one again. The boys gave me hell, but I overcame the block and got more of a surplus up! Also, sadly, there aren’t too many more chapters remaining for this story, so we’ll be keeping with the every other Monday posts for this one with Wicked Ones: Letters and Journals on the alternating Mondays… because somehow, those days are lining up with just when we’d need that particular snippet to go along with the main story. Don’t ask me, I’ve not a clue!

~Adora & Katsuko [endsection]

Wicked Ones – 10

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 2,489
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

It was late in the afternoon when he and Billy rejoined the rest of the world, meeting Chisolm and the others just outside town to discuss their options and chances. Goodnight noticed that once again Joshua was riding beside Vasquez, and he wondered absently to himself if his baby brother was a mite smitten.

He wasn’t dumb enough to just ask him that, but he could think it all he wanted.

“It’s a box of death,” he offered when Chisolm asked for opinions. “Even better for us if we can teach some of these men to hit the broad side of a barn at twenty paces.”

Off to the opposite side of Vasquez, he could hear Joshua snort. It was highly likely that his brother held a similar opinion as his own.

“We could do with a few surprises,” Billy offered. Goodnight wondered if he was thinking the same as him: that the miners could prove a useful addition to their ranks, provided they first dealt with Bogue’s men within the camp.

“Any thoughts on that?” Chisolm asked. “We need more than a few surprises.”

“I once knew a man,” Joshua began, “who fell out of a five story building.” And Goodnight nearly choked on a laugh. Yeah, or so he’d said. Corporal Reilly was a card, fond of telling winders, and that building was never the same height twice. “Every window he passed, people could hear him call out, so far, so good. He’s dead now though.” Then he abruptly shifted to, “Hey, Chisolm, have I made good on my horse yet?”

Now that was a story Goodnight wanted to hear, if only so he knew how many times to shoot the damned Yank. The man’s reply of ‘so far, so good’ did little to improve his mood, and he was more than willing to take the sniper point when they arrived on the hills overlooking the mine.

If every Blackstone he gunned down was a certain warrant officer to his eyes, that was his own business. Although Joshua seemed a bit stunned that he took them down so easily; apparently only the rumors that he had retired were the ones to make the rounds. That was good news for him and Billy; no one would expect Goodnight Robicheaux, war hero and retired bounty hunter, to happily shoot a man in the head for attempting to collect on his lover’s bounty.

Once all the Blackstones were dead, he stood and moved to return the Winchester to the saddle holster. He paused when Joshua turned to him, seeming to want to say something to him, only to shake his head and move to hop back on Wild Jack.

Wonder what’s going through his head right about now, Goodnight mused, climbing onto Adelaide and patting the mare’s neck before falling into what was becoming his customary spot in line behind his brother. Chisolm led their group across the narrow river into the mining camp, and Goodnight noted that all the men were wary of the newcomers. It wasn’t surprising in the least that more than one eyeballed the rifles in Chisolm’s, Joshua’s, and his own saddle holsters; at least a few men amongst the group seemed to recognize the Mississippi for what it was and gave him a slight respectful nod when he passed them.

After all, being a sharpshooter in the War wasn’t in any way glamorous. Goodnight was certain he was only one of a handful that had made it through to the bitter end on either side.

Chisolm spoke to the miners once they’d all come out from the mine itself or wherever else they’d been working when the shooting started, telling them that they were all free to go or free to join in their fight. From the way he spoke, it was clear that he was more than just hoping that they would throw in with the seven of them and Rose Creek. Joshua pulled out his flask, something that Goodnight had noticed him doing a hell of a lot of since they’d crossed paths once again, but this time instead of drinking, he tossed it to one of the younger miners standing nearby.

A peace offering, he supposed.

It took no time at all for them to find what they were looking for: the stockpile of dynamite was sitting in a shed not too close to the water but not too close to anything that might ignite it either.

His Billy, God love him, was the master of the understatement. “This should help,” he noted, tone completely even and deadpan.

Joshua’s eyes lit up, and Goodnight knew that meant mischief. Surely eight years could not change the delight his baby brother had in causing a ruckus as a means of distraction.

“I’ve always wanted to blow something up,” his brother said with a wicked sort of glee; he just managed to keep from laughing at how pleased the idea made the younger.

Well now, they had their distraction. Now they just had to get everyone back to town and set about the work what needed done. After all, they had six days now, and every goddamn minute counted.


 As far as Joshua was concerned, today was shaping up to be a pain in the ass. There had been the piss-poor attempt at a rifle line with Goodnight. Hell, before that, he had tried to get the bastards set up before his brother could arrive, only to discover that most of them didn’t know their lefts from their rights. Some of them had even thought hoes and straight razors were appropriate substitutes for rifles.

Rifle training had been a wash. From what he had heard over lunch, knife training had been much the same, with people flat-out walking away from it. At least with the rifle line, he had spotted a few men who might be able to be improved in less than a week and single them out for additional training. Little Teddy Q sprang to mind, mouthy little shit that he was, as did the schoolteacher, Josiah. There were a few others, ones that he would know their faces from the lineup but had no idea as to their names.

His brother and Rocks had been nowhere to be seen during the meal. From what he had managed to overhear from Horne talking to Chisolm, the two had been upstairs in their room, and Joshua wasn’t touching that with a ten foot pole. Nope, instead he had just sat in his chair between Vasquez, who was eating everything like it was going to be taken away from him, and Red Harvest, who was barely touching his food, and tried not to brood.

After all, the brooding wasn’t doing him any damn good, and really, it just made him more irritable, more likely to want to just shoot someone in the face and call it a day, and more likely to be put off his own food. He had had to live a bit lean after… well, after spending a huge portion of his savings buying out a bounty… And he never wanted to have another day of having to wonder where his next meal was coming from.

Obviously, Vasquez had had too many days like that as it was. No one ate like this man did who hadn’t gone hungry at some point in his life, maybe even more than once. He ate everything he could get his hands on—and soaked up every interaction with each person like it was just as life-giving.

Either way, he had ended up sliding a biscuit or two from his own plate onto Vasquez’s without a word. If anyone else had noticed, nothing was said, and he was happy with it that way. Even Vasquez had been strangely silent on the matter, though Joshua was less certain how he felt about that.

But all of that had been some hours ago. Since then, they had made some preliminary plans. They had even staged a takeover of Bogue’s mining camp and made off with most of the miners and all of the dynamite… and he could freely admit to being incredibly excited about that.

He hadn’t been exaggerating, after all: he had always wanted to blow something up.

That in mind, Chisolm had given him the task of plotting out where the explosives would end up going in order to get the most use out of them. In turn, he had recruited Vasquez to go over the map of the valley that Rose Creek sat in that Miss Emma and little Teddy Q had given Chisolm and Chisolm had in turn given him. He knew Chisolm and Old Jack Horne were planning some ditches along the main road into Rose Creek, so they would need explosives for that area. Those spots hadn’t been decided yet, though, so the pair of them were looking at other locations.

“What do you think?” he prompted. “Maybe the shed?”

Vasquez nodded, making a mark with a fountain pen. Joshua wasn’t sure where he’d turned that up, and he wasn’t asking, not right now. “Maybe… here too?” He tapped the end of the pen against the map next to the windmill, between it and the corral.

Joshua pulled the map over to look closer. “Looks good.” It wouldn’t be hard to funnel at least part of Bogue’s army through that path and to the shed. No, it wouldn’t be difficult at all, and it would probably even be in line with some of what Chisolm had in mind. “We can plan for more of this once we know where the trenches are going to be. No sense doing any of this twice if we don’t have to, yeah?”

He glanced up to meet Vasquez’s eyes, so much closer than he thought he had seen them before. For a long moment, all he could think about was something that had happened earlier in the day, back at the mining camp.

That damn noose had been dangling, moving in the faint breeze coming up from the east. Vasquez had shuddered, staring up at the damn thing as they’d rode past, and he’d slowed Jack to draw even with the Mexican. Some part of him had wanted to reach across both their horses and hold the man tight, but then had not been the time. He didn’t know when the time would be, but it hadn’t been right then.

“Never liked those things,” he had instead offered in a quiet voice.

There had been a hundred thousand things Vasquez could have said, not in the least of which being a reminder that Joshua was in the wrong damn profession if he wanted to avoid being around nooses. Thankfully, he avoided the easier ones and instead mildly commented, “I don’t believe they are things you will have to worry about too much, güero.”

The laugh that had slipped out of him was broken and harsh… but still quiet enough that the others shouldn’t hear it. “On the contrary.”

Vasquez had scoffed, giving him that skeptical raised eyebrow yet again. “And why would that be? They don’t hang many bounty hunters, you know.”

Even now, hours later, he still didn’t know what had possessed him to say what he had been thinking. “Oh, it happens. Difference between Chisholm and me is he has the law on his side. I know a former bounty hunter out of Texas who has a bounty like yours on his head now. Ain’t what I meant, though.”

“What did you mean?” Vasquez had asked, voice both quiet and deep… and very distracting, which he was not getting into, thank you.

There hadn’t exactly been a lot of time. At the front of the group, Chisolm had been pulling Horse up to a stop, Goodnight and Rocks just behind him. They wouldn’t be able to talk for much longer, not with any degree of privacy. He had nodded towards Goodnight and spoke quickly. “My brother ain’t the only one in our family with certain… preferences, if you follow me, the kind that tend to get the ‘good folk’ of towns all riled up and set for a Sunday lynching. Hell, I’ve seen men hanged for the mere suggestion of… some of the things I just said. Heard of a pair of fellas getting burned alive over towards Texas for getting caught in the act. So, yeah, Vas, I get not liking the sight of a noose.”

But that was then, and this was now. Nothing had been said about the conversation while they had been at the mining camp, probably mostly because the rest of the group and a whole lot of strangers were right there, and nothing had been said about it since they had been back in Rose Creek. It was coming, though; he could feel it, crackling in the back of his head and never really quite turning him loose.

He had done everything he could. He’d made it as plain as he dared that he was open to… Well, that he was open. He was… fairly certain he had made it obvious he was interested in Vasquez… and he could only say ‘fairly’, because while he had fucked his fair share of men, he couldn’t say he had ever had something like these… feelings before.

He couldn’t say he liked them much.

With a sigh, he folded up the map. There really wasn’t that much else they could do until he knew more about Chisolm’s plan with the trenches, and it was his understanding that the entire group was going to walk the town and area in an hour or so to get some ideas on where to place their shooters—provided they could get any of these men into fighting shape—and any of those other surprises Rocks had been talking about.

Now, he just needed to get this part over with. Either he’d totally screwed up trying to say he was interested, which he wouldn’t doubt, knowing himself, or Vasquez didn’t exactly return the sentiment. Either way, that left him with something—something else—to deal with.

“Look, Vasquez,” he began, eyes locked on the table top and the folded map, talking as quickly as he could to get this whole thing over with but still quietly in case he had somehow missed someone close enough to hear him, “what I said earlier, in the camp… I’m sorry. I won’t bring it up again, but I would appreciate it if you don’t go mentioning it to anyone either. I wasn’t kidding about seeing folks lynched for that sort of thing…”

There was a muttered curse next to him, then Vasquez was pressed up against his side. “Do not apologize,” he interrupted quietly, and when had he moved to speak right into his ear, “for being you. You are a man who carries so much responsibility. I cannot even imagine that. I would not tell your secrets; I would have to tell my own first.”

Okay, what? Joshua turned his head to try and meet the other man’s eyes, only to find himself somewhat distracted.

Apparently kissing was a thing he and Vasquez were going to be doing now.

[section=Footer Notes]04 March 2017

Gods, I had been waiting to write this chapter almost from the beginning. I knew approximately when Joshua and Vasquez would hook up almost from when I started the story, but getting them to this point was more of a trial than I had anticipated.

While I’m posting Chapter Ten, Katsuko and I are finishing up writing Chapters Sixteen and Seventeen… which contains something else I’ve been wanting to do since the start of this story.

For the record, this is still day 2 in Rose Creek. A lot of the montage stuff might get reordered a bit to fit the narrative better. Just an FYI.

~Adora[endsection]

After Midnight – 12 – Wild Hunt

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 1,288
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Faraday never thought he would say it, not if he lived another few thousand years, but watching Vasquez eat was damn near enough to put him completely off food for a while. Not forever, of course, because forever was a damn long time. But he was comfortable with saying that it might be a while before he was having venison again.

Maybe he could get the halfling, Teddy Q, to part with one of those apples of his. He had been listening to some of the townsfolk talk since they arrived about the mysterious properties of those apples. He had heard stories of little Teddy growing the tastiest fruit that could keep a man full for a day off a single apple. That sounded like a mighty fine thing, if it was true. That were the case, then he might take it upon himself to take a few of these apples to stash around town for Vasquez.

After all, the god had made a rather sizable dent in the local deer population tonight… and they were only one day into Rose Creek. There would be a lot more days and nights to keep him fed. If Chisolm’s guess was right, after all, they still had at least six more nights to get through.

“You seem to be thinking very hard, güero.”

He turned back towards Vasquez and offered up a smirk. Say whatever else he wanted about the monster, Vasquez was at least fastidious: not a drop spilled, not an ounce of meat wasted, barely even bones left behind. Granted, one of them was currently being used to clean between his teeth, but that was the way of things.

He had known Fae, mostly in the Unseelie Court, who were a great deal more messy… and that was with eating humans.

“Full now?” he asked… and laughed uproariously when the other monster only did a vague shrugging thing that only involved moving his head back and forth. Even though he knew there was nothing left to see of the meal the Old God had had, he still glanced around as if he could see the carcasses of the six or so mule deer that were no longer among the living. “In that case, can I be the first to say ‘damn’, because… damn.”

Unsurprisingly that got a laugh. Honestly, he had met a lot of monsters over his long years. Admittedly, few were as old as the Fae in general and himself in particular, but the ones that were even close to his age generally were sticks in the mud. For that matter, he had met a lot of monsters who were younger than him who fit that dour description. This particular Old God, however, had proven to be the exception to that rule.

Well, in truth, all the monsters on this little quest of Sam Chisolm’s had proven to be exceptions to that rule, but it was the Old God that was holding his attention, thank you very much. It wasn’t going to be easy keeping from making his interest plain. Then again… What was life without taking some chances?

Of course, before he could say anything, the Old God frowned and asked, “What is this Wild Hunt? That you were talking with the niño about?”

Well, there went any semblance of a mood there might possibly been towards something fun. Still, he managed to rally enough to smirk along with his drawled response of “That’s right: they’ve never had to run down towards Old Mexico way. Never any need as far as I can recall.”

Vasquez shrugged expansively. “We take care of that problem ourselves, my brothers and sisters and I.”

“If your brothers and sisters have teeth anything like yours, I can see how that would be.” The Old God chuckled again, with a grin that showed off too many of said teeth and sent shivers straight down Faraday’s spine.

Man, why did his type have to be hot as hell and just as dangerous? Damn his fucking libido and its very specific fucking tastes.

“A lot of the rest of us monsters don’t have the advantage of those teeth,” Faraday continued, unable to drag his eyes away from them. “We had to come up with another solution to the wendigo problem, so… the Wild Hunt.”

“And you told the niño you rode with it?”

As much as he wanted to grit his teeth, as much as he wanted to demand the topic be over, he forced a shaky smile. “Full of questions tonight, huh? Yeah, I ran with the Wild Hunt for a while. Off and on for a few hundred years, point of fact. Left it in ’58, I think ‘bout a year after the baby demon’s brothers… yeah.”

“You do not think that the third brother is alive.” It was a statement, and in answer, he shrugged. “The niño seemed certain that he was.”

“Baby demon didn’t see the same chunk ripped out of Ezra that I did. I don’t think even Antichrists can survive something like that. I think Goody’s… hopeful, but he’s still a baby, demon or not. You’re allowed to believe all kinds of ridiculous shit at that age.” He pulled off his hat and ran a shaking hand through his hair. “I… Can this conversation be over? I will pay you or blow you, whichever will get this conversation to end the soonest.”

One dark eyebrow shot up, expressively heading towards Vasquez’s hairline. “Really, güero?”

Shit… Had he said that out loud? Well, in for a penny and all that nonsense. “Unless there’s something better on offer, yeah.” He smirked and moved like water into the Old God’s space. “Is there something better on offer, Vasquez? No… Mictlantecuhtli?”

Well, that was nice, watching the other monster’s eyes darken like that. Yeah, that was good. There was a power to true names, after all, especially where monsters like Faraday were concerned, and seduction was a Fae’s best gift and weapon, all in one.

“Still do not actually know your name, güero…”

And that was almost funny, like his thoughts weren’t entirely his own… or at the very least, not private. He’d heard of seers who could do that—pluck thoughts right out of a being’s head—but never another monster who could, not even an Old God. He wished he could say that it lessened the appeal, but not really.

“The Fae don’t give out their real names.”

“Then you are a Fae.” And oh yes, he had said that he was… what was it… a little of this and a little of that when he introduced himself to the Old God, hadn’t he? For that matter, he had been tormenting the baby demon with it for days, and now that they were in Rose Creek, he had no intention of stopping.

“Close enough.”

There was a little something of death in Vasquez’s eyes, enough that it was both terrifying and intoxicating, especially this close: close enough to share each other’s breath but still not quite touch. It made him just itch to touch, to taste the Old God. It was like temptation incarnate was standing in front of him… and Faraday had never been good at resisting any form of temptation.

Vasquez whispered, “Tell me, güero,” the words little more than air against his lips, and Faraday let out a shuddered sigh, squeezing his eyes tightly shut.

“Damn it, Vas. That’s cheating.” At the Old God’s dark, deep chuckle, he squinted his eyes open again to glare. “Fine. You win.”

He leaned in close, hands sliding around the taller monster, and whispered the secret he had been keeping from everyone for at least a millennia: what he was.

[section=Footer Notes]01 March 2017

So, yes, Faraday has finally said what he is… but not in a helpful way. Oh no, of course not that. Goody is going to go spare if he finds out that Vasquez knew before he did. Go absolutely spare, I tell you.

It was linked last chapter, but it’s important for this one too, so here’s our Monstrous interpretation of the Wild Hunt and what it’s there for. And yes, Faraday did indeed ride with the Hunt… and yes, three of Goody’s brothers rode with it as well. A bit more information on them is in the link above.

Running monster tally:

Emma Cullen – one quarter Changeling (on her father’s side)
Bartholomew Bogue – warlock uppity witch Uppity witch
McCann – hedge witch
Denali – skin-walker
Teddy Q – half earth elemental half dryad (on his mother’s side)
Sam Chisolm – human monster hunter
Faraday – Trickster Fae A little of this, a little of that Fae something old and powerful Fae. Trickster Dammit, Faraday!
Goodnight Robicheaux – demon An Antichrist Shadow-walker Antichrist
Billy Rocks – An angel of death Air-spirit Angel of Death
Vasquez – Ancient God (Old Mexico/Aztec/Mayan) Eater of the dead Old God
Jack Horne – mostly harmless Future wendigo (currently human, haunted by helpful ghosts)
Red Harvest – shaman (in training) (currently on his monster-walk)[endsection]

Wicked Ones: Letters and Journals – 01 – Carson City Letter

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 627
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Goody,

I hope this letter finds you well. I suppose I am. It’s deen been a few months since my last letter. Not sure how many. It was spring or summer last time, and now it ain’t long before winter sits sets in.

I brought in a couple of interesting bounties in these months. Biggest one was only $150, but it got me a new gun and plenty of ammo. Let me spoil Jack a bit too. He still won’t let me buy him a new set of tack, but I did manage to pursuede persuade him to accept a new blanket. It was a trying couple of weeks, but he’s letting me use it on him now. That’ll be a good thing when winter gets here. His old one was getting a bit threddare thredbear ratty.

Guess my spelling is still pretty bad, isn’t it? Maman would be so disappointed. Probably Colette more. She always got madder than hell when I screwed up something simple. Always tried to tell it didn’t look right and some of those letters all look the same, but I don’t think she ever got that. You used to get it, Goody. I miss that.

I miss how we used to be. I miss how close we used to be and how we used to talk. I miss how we used to be able to talk. I hate how we haven’t been able to do that for years. I miss talking to you, my brother.

One of the bounties I chased bowm down was just to pay back the ferrier farrier for reshoeing Jack. You’d have laughed at this guy, Goody. He was so busy trying to get away that he fell over a cliff and broke his own damn neck. Almost felt bad taking him in for the money. Still did it though. Easiest $50 I’ve ever made.

I’m going to be heading pack back to Carson City soon. Summer was harsh this year, and some of the old timers are talking about it being a hard winter this year. They said the same thing last year, but I don’t know. Seems like maybe this year it will be. I’ve got enough stashed back now to ride out the winter, so I’ll probably stay there until Spring, barring any kind of emergencies.

I got one last bounty to collect on before I go pack back home to Carson City. The guy runs alone, so it shouldn’t be too hard. I won’t mention what he’s done to get a bounty on him. I don’t like thinking about it. It was bad, though, Goody, bad enough that I need to take him out before he can do it to anyone else.

If you want to meet me, I’ll

I can’t ask you to come join me in Carson City. I want to, but I can’t. I’ve done too much that I regret, not in the least of which being how we parted ways. I said so much that I regret back then. When I think about what I called you back then, I could kick myself. I could do worse than that . I wasn’t thinking. I’d go so far as to say I was stupid.

I can’t write any more. This is Goody, I

I’m stopping here, Goody. This is so much harder than I thought it would be.

Take care of yourself, Goody. Know that I miss you and that I think of you often. I would like to see you again, but I’m not going to ask you to come here. If you decide to, I should be arriving in early October. No later than the middle of the month unless something changes. I hope nothing changes.

Your loving brother,

T-Jo

The PDF version of the Carson City letter can be found here.

[section=Footer Notes]27 February 2017

There will be links to the letters in PDF format with correct handwriting in each chapter. For Joshua, I’ve chosen the Saucy Jack font (with Mistral for special characters).

There is method to my madness regarding all the things that have been scratched out. Namely, I’m not sure where I developed my headcanon of Faraday being a little dyslexic. It came about somewhere between the fanon that he can’t read and the deleted scene where he mentions reading books about Jack Horne. And given that this is a Joshua Faraday who was raised in a well-to-do Cajun/Creole household, it just seemed to make sense. Bearing in mind, of course, that this would have been written in French, of course.

~Adora[endsection]

Wicked Ones – 09

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 2,605
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

“Fire!”

The line of men fired on command, but if they were trying to hit the targets then they failed spectacularly. Goodnight was certain that the only thing in danger had been the grass.

“Jesus wept,” Joshua muttered from the wagon, and the elder Robicheaux barely kept from tensing up at the unwelcome commentary. Yes, he knew these men were piss poor shots, but his brother didn’t need to say it to their faces… yet.

“How many times do I gotta tell you to keep that leg under you?” he asked rhetorically as he walked down the line. “You, level up that arm. Schoolteacher, get that hat off your head. Keep your eye on the target and not the clouds. Our enemy isn’t a bird. Teddy,” and here he paused for a moment to fix the young man with a stern look even though he wasn’t looking. “I expect better outta you. The recoil is not to be shunned; it is to be absorbed.”

Honestly, it wasn’t a difficult concept. Shit, he and the rest of the Tigers had managed to teach Joshua to shoot in less time with less thorough instructions. If a twelve year old could manage this, how pathetic were these poor bastards?

“I ain’t shunning nothing, sir,” Teddy groused, and Goodnight just stopped.

He took a moment to draw in a steadying breath before asking, “Are you back-talking me, son? Do you believe you know better—”

For the second time since they arrived at the makeshift firing range, the man next to Teddy fired off his rifle at nothing but the sky above. It was enough to jar him out of the verbal lashing he’d been about to lay on the young widow Cullen’s associate, and he instead focused on the other poor son of a bitch.

“That’s the second time for you,” Goodnight said. “You’re done for today.”

“I’m sorry, sir, I just—”

“No! You’re done. Go make me some eggs.” He watched the man rise to his feet, no awareness of the rifle in his hand, and asked mockingly, “You gonna point that thing at me?”

The abashed man scurried off, and Goodnight turned his attention back to the line. “You don’t need to be afraid of the shot. Just squeeze the trigger: don’t pull it. It’s a gentle motion, so gentle you near ‘bout surprise yourself when you fire the weapon. Focus, steady your hand, and fire when ready.”

There was a resounding silence from the line, and Goodnight snapped out, “Fire!”

And… nothing. More grass cut down in the prime of its life from a hail of misfired bullets.

“I am in awe,” he said, absolutely no emotion in his voice, “that this many men could miss that many targets. Twice.” He shook his head and looked up to the sky. “I’m looking at a line of dead men. Do any of y’all even give a good goddamn that Bogue is coming in less than a week now and has plans to kill each and every one of you without batting an eye? Do you just not care ‘bout the land you bled for, that you sacrificed the comforts of all you knew before to make your own place? Do you just hate your wives, your children? You sad sons of bitches.”

“Why don’t you inspire them?”

This drew his gaze from the sky, and he shot a glare at Joshua even as he wondered when the hell his brother had moved so close. “We need the lead,” he drawled, and it was true. If these sorry sacks of shit couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn from the inside, then he and the rest of this group were gonna need all the ammunition they could keep their hands on.

“I’m sorry,” Joshua hissed, “but all I’m hearing is I don’t care enough to teach these people.”

Goodnight’s eyes narrowed. “You challenging me now, mon frère?”

The younger brother glared back. “I don’t know. You think you can out-shoot me?” With that, he shoved one of the rifles he was holding at the elder, and Goodnight noted absently that at some point his Winchester 1873 carbine had made it from his saddle holster to his brother’s hands.

Taking just a moment to check that his newest rifle was in ready condition, Goodnight turned from Joshua and took aim at the far left target. He focused his ire on the poor sandbag and let fire six shots, all in rapid succession, ejecting each spent cartridge without pausing. He could almost swear he heard an echo to every shot… or not an echo, but six shots fired in near unison with his own.

When he lowered the carbine, Goodnight was pleased to note that the head had fallen off the target he’d chosen. The target immediately to the right of his, however, had been destroyed in what would have been the chest as a result of Joshua’s own shots.

He turned to shoot a glare at his brother, but instead he was caught up short by just how… pleased Joshua looked. If he hadn’t had the conversation prior to their little competition, Goodnight would almost think that his little brother had been playing.

Rather than speak to anyone, the Cajun turned on his heel, shouldering his Winchester and stalking back towards the hotel. Right now, all he really wanted to do was forget that death was coming for every damned fool left in Rose Creek… and that the number included his T-Jo. Even if Joshua didn’t want to admit it anymore.


 Well, that couldn’t have gone worse if Joshua had been deliberately trying to antagonize Goodnight. He had opened his mouth and promptly inserted his entire leg, never mind just his foot. Instead of the attempt at a friendly challenge he had intended, every single word that came out of his mouth was exactly what he had been trying not to say: all but daring his brother into a fight, one that he didn’t particularly want to win.

At least he could hope that no one had been able to hear what had been said. Oh, they could probably read a thousand things into the way the pair of them had been sizing each other up… or into the way his brother had all but snatched his rifle out of Joshua’s hands… or how much they had both been concentrating on their shots… or into the stiff way Goodnight had stalked off afterwards… But more than likely, they hadn’t heard anything, so that was a small victory.

But the look Sam Chisolm was giving him as he in turn watching his brother stalk away… He got the distinct feeling that Chisolm was filling in the blanks, connecting all the dots between what he had seen and what he hadn’t heard, and the man was coming up with an answer that Joshua didn’t want to know anything about. He couldn’t say he much liked the considering look in Chisolm’s eyes or the way he glanced between Goodnight and Joshua like he was sizing the pair of them up. There wasn’t a lot he could do about it, not right now, but he was going to keep all of it in mind.

“Go home and polish your rifles,” Joshua heard himself calling to the rifle line, completely without thought. “Maybe the glint’ll scare them off.”

He turned and strode away, tossing the borrowed gun back into the wagon he had pulled it from in the first place. He made a point of not even looking in Chisolm’s direction as he walked away, just like he made a point of not reacting to someone on the line asking if they weren’t going to be shooting anymore. If he tried hard enough, none of those things were important.

And he wasn’t going to be glancing around town to see if he could tell where his brother had gone when he’d left. It was a moot point: wherever Goodnight was, Rocks was there too. Goodnight wouldn’t be too keen to see him, and he wasn’t too keen on seeing Rocks. All in all, it was a point not worth belaboring. It wasn’t like he could say the things he wanted to say anyway.

Ever since that fight all those years ago, the one that had driven the Robicheaux brothers apart, he had tried to make a point of thinking before he started running his mouth. It didn’t always work. He was getting better about it, no doubt about that, but right now, it just wasn’t working. There was something about being right next to his brother that erased his ability to think before he spoke right out of his repertoire. He didn’t much care for it.

As it was, he was walking a thin line each and every moment he was in Rose Creek. Moment to moment, especially when anywhere near his brother, he didn’t know if he was going to react like Joshua Faraday or Joshua Robicheaux. The gambler or the bounty hunter…

Neither would put up with some of the shit going on around here, but where Faraday wanted to swear and stomp his feet in annoyance, Robicheaux wanted to either put his fist in people’s faces for the annoyance or put a couple of bullets into any asshole that annoyed him. Faraday wanted to scream his frustration to the heavens; Robicheaux still harbored some thoughts about sewing little Teddy Q’s mouth shut.

A couple of days ago, back in Volcano Springs, Goodnight had made a crack about him looking like their shared bastard of a father but Joshua acting like him. Those words had stayed with him these last few days, haunting him in his darkest moments. They had kept him awake last night, and he suspected that the only reason he had been able to get any damn sleep the night before that was Teddy Q’s quality whiskey in that box canyon. That was long gone now, of course, and so was sleep, at least for now.

Maybe Goodnight was right. When they had been younger, that had often been the case, often to Joshua’s chagrin: he himself was apt to run off at the mouth, and Goodnight was usually right. Not always, thank God, or he suspected his brother would have been insufferable to live with, but often enough. He still wasn’t sure he wanted to admit that Goodnight had probably been right about Billy Rocks too—Joshua, this is not a man to arrest; this is a man to befriend—but everything that he could remember of had happened thus far since they left Volcano Springs seemed to back up Goodnight’s assessment from eight years ago.

No, Goodnight was probably right. Joshua did have too much of Monsieur Robicheaux in him… and he had deliberately worked to bring as much of it to the surface as possible, all in order to do a job better. He had modeled his Joshua Robicheaux, Bounty Hunter, persona on their father, after all. He had cut some of the worst parts out—and he would gladly and cheerfully put a bullet in his own head before he let himself hurt a woman or a child—but that had been the extent of it.

When he and Goodnight had parted ways eight years ago, people had still considered him fairly young. Even though he had, at that point, lived through more in his twenty-one years than most people did in a full lifetime, both criminals and other bounty hunters had taken one look at him and seen only his age. He had needed a way to make them take him seriously, one that didn’t require him to use his brother’s name all the time, and being the meanest motherfucker in the game had been a good way to do just that.

He had half been making plans to head to Missouri if he accidentally happened to survive this week, maybe even bringing Vasquez along if the Mexican was amenable to the idea. Maybe if he did that, he could leave Joshua Robicheaux behind in the west. He liked Joshua Faraday much, much more.

Too damn bad he couldn’t seem to hold onto that part of himself too well these days.


 Billy was already more than a little frustrated with how much the good men of Rose Creek seemed to not give a shit about defending their homes, and thus he was hiding out in his and Goody’s room with a bottle of Busthead that he’d gotten hold of before Joshua could spot it in the bar downstairs and a single glass that he’d drained twice over now. He had been expecting to have another hour or so before his lover returned from his own try at training the menfolk, and was a bit startled when the door was all but slammed open to allow Goody to stalk into the room.

He blinked to see the Winchester carbine in the other man’s hands, knowing better than most that Goody tended to keep it in the saddle holster when not actually using it, much like he did with the Mississippi. A quick glance to his right showed said second holster sitting empty, and he wondered how he had missed that earlier.

Rather than dwell on that thought, Billy turned his attention to where Goody was wiping down his rifle and cleared his throat. Once his lover glanced his way, he asked, “Rough session?”

Goody actually snorted. “We’d best hope that Bogue somehow figures out how to fly or decides to burrow his way into Rose Creek; that’s the only way any of these sons of bitches are gonna hit anything.”

“That bad?” Billy winced a bit at the harsh bark of laughter that received. It wasn’t often that Goody fell into and remained in a mean mood, but the past couple of days since arriving in town it seemed as if that were where he planned to stay. “Are any of them redeemable?”

The older man paused thoughtfully, head tilted to the side as he rested his rifle on his knee for a moment. “Well, one of ‘em is getting good at making me eggs.”

The Korean actually laughed at that, and he was pleased to see Goody relax at the sound. His Goody was especially vindictive towards people he expected better things out of, which was likely why he and Joshua were all but at each other’s throats whenever they crossed paths in town.

And that reminded him…

Billy stood up, setting down his glass and moving over to where he’d dropped his saddle bags when they claimed this particular room as theirs. He could sense Goody’s curious gaze, and he hoped that this wasn’t going to blow up in his face. He opened up the pocket and looked inside, only to frown darkly.

The letter was gone.

He knew where he had placed it, taking care to tuck it carefully between a small book of poems written in his native tongue — it had been a gift from his eomma and he’d never traveled anywhere without it — and the original copy of his bounty writ that Goody had given him the first night they’d made love rather than merely fuck. But while both the book and writ were tucked away safely in the soft linen cloth he kept them loosely wrapped in same as always, the letter was nowhere to be seen.

Either he had dreamed receiving it, or someone had rifled through his things.

“Billy?” Goody had stood from his seat and moved a few steps closer, concern in his lovely blue eyes. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing,” he replied simply, closing the pocket and setting the bags back on the chair. “Just misplaced something. I’m sure it’ll turn up.”

And if it turned up with whom he suspected? Even Goody’s friendship with the man might not save Chisolm from being stabbed in the face.

[section=Footer Notes]25 February 2017

Finally! A story not related to one of our birthdays! I think I worked on Joshua’s bit of this over Christmas, but I’m not counting that. We’re catching up fast to where I’m at writing, but I think I’ll be able to avoid having to do a slowed posting schedule or hiatus.

Thank you so much to everyone who has left a comment! They’ve all been so lovely, and some of them have been so inspiring or self esteem-building… right when I needed that the most.

Anyway, thanks again for reading. If you comment, thank you so much for that as well. It means the world to me.

Cheers!
~Adora[endsection]

Wicked Ones: The Early Years – 04 – T-Jo

[section=Disclaimers & Notes]Disclaimers: All copyrights belong to their respective copyright holders, including but not limited to MGM, Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, and others. I make no profit on this piece of fan-produced work. The story itself belongs to Adora Addams and Katsuko. Please do not steal!
Word Count: 932
Archive: DarkMagick.net, Apollymi’s Grimoire, and Archive of Our Own. Anyone else wanting it, please ask first. I’ll probably say yes, but ask first…[endsection]

Keeping his promise wasn’t always easy. Letty had the bad habit of trying to put her own self in the way whenever Monsieur Robicheaux was deep in his cups, mainly because the bastard at least pretended to be apologetic when his only daughter ‘somehow’ met with his fists. Even so, Goodnight hated when that happened, and continued to paint the target on his own back.

And unfortunately, somehow T-Jo had picked up on a bit of that nobility that the elder Robicheaux brother had in abundance—Goodnight credited his noble streak to Maman, so he presumed that his baby brother’s came from his own maternal influence—and likewise threw himself in between their bastard of a father and their only sister. Goodnight absolutely hated seeing those bruises bloom, but allowed the child to pretend that they came from playing too roughly.

But still, he managed more often than not to make himself the target rather than T-Jo. The lack of fading bruises on his brother’s skin was worth the pain and dark marks on his own skin, was worth the hurt ribs and the minor limp from where the bastard had more than once kicked him in recent memory. It was a couple of months since his decision to be the primary target, and Letty’s birthday had come upon them more quickly than he anticipated.

Of course, it was a huge affair. Monsieur Robicheaux always made a fuss of his only daughter’s birthdays, because he planned to marry her off to one of the other wealthy families in the area. So of course she was primped to perfection no matter how annoyed her eyes showed her to be, and she gave enough smiles to make it seem like she was happy with the fuss even though Goodnight was positive she’d be much happier running around the grounds and climbing trees as she did every other day she could get away with it.

And, he noted, his baby brother was just as annoyed and unhappy with the turn of events. T-Jo was more than used to it just being the three of them kids around, with the slaves and Maman and rarely Monsieur Robicheaux, and there wasn’t even time to slink off to get away from the rigmarole.

Well… technically speaking, there was no time to slip away. Realistically, Goodnight knew for goddamned certain that the library would still be a safe haven to hide away in. Letty would be pissed that they slipped off and left her to entertain their guests, but… it wasn’t like any of the folk out there cared for the male Robicheaux siblings, given that neither of them were admirable prospects.

After all, T-Jo was a bastard in the literal sense of the word, and Goodnight already knew that he was bent in that manner that would not lead to him fathering children. Monsieur Robicheaux worked hard to keep rumors from spreading, but female companionship didn’t even sound appealing to the elder brother. He knew what men and women were supposed to get up to, but he had found some more… risqué material amongst Maman’s books that hinted at men and men together, and that was of far more interest to him.

Plus, Goodnight hadn’t made his disdain of some of the young ladies Monsieur Robicheaux invited over with their families a secret. If anyone suspected, the instant the old bastard started trying to make marriage prospects the rumors would explode. And he’d probably be dead, so best to make the most of life while he could.

That was why, when Letty finally managed to get away from her “gentleman callers” and find a table to set up at with her town friends—and why were girls always so giggly?—Goodnight decided he had enough of being sociable and proper and that it was time to go elsewhere that the old bastard couldn’t find him or his brother for a while.

If they were lucky, maybe they could even have time to go out to the stable and let out the old man’s show ponies. He hated it when the fussy little things got even a little bit dusty; it had been raining all day and there was enough mud out there to turn a white pony brown. Hopefully that would happen, and they could avoid catching trouble for it by ‘being in the library’ the entire time.

“Hey,” he said softly, nudging his baby brother’s side gently to catch his attention; poor thing had been going all glassy-eyed with boredom. “Think we should leave the ladies to their party, T-Jo?”

Goodnight had spent so long just thinking of his brother by the nickname that he didn’t really notice saying it out loud. At least, not until he saw the way the younger boy’s face lit up brightly, and he had a brief moment to wonder if he should have tried actually spending more time with T-Jo sooner.

The boy gave him a gap-toothed smile, but his reply was just as soft-spoken as his own words had been. “But I wanted a piece of cake.”

Goodnight chuckled softly. “You know good and well that Cooky’s saving you a piece or two in the kitchen. Let’s go get it.”

To be honest, that was the moment their relationship changed. T-Jo was never too far from his side, which made it much easier to keep him safe from Monsieur Robicheaux; if he managed to get himself caught in the cross-hairs of the old man’s rage… well, that was all the better for both his younger siblings. Goodnight was careful to watch over both brother and sister, and he was happy that T-Jo was more than comfortable around him.

[section=Footer Notes]24 February 2017

Oh gods, I’m so sorry.

~Katsuko[endsection]