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Vasquez ([personal profile] quinientos) wrote2017-08-02 11:21 pm
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-08-28 06:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Moments ago, Faraday might have bristled at being guided, at being coaxed along like some frightened calf, but in the here and now, he merely nods against Vasquez. Vasquez squeezes at Faraday’s injured side, and he gasps, startled, wincing at the added pressure.

“The hell are you—?”

The pain doesn’t fade – Faraday doubts anything but an act of God might make it disappear, with the way it’s shrieking at him – but the sharpness of it is sanded away a little, allows him to take a deep breath at last. It’s helping a little, whatever it is Vasquez is doing, and Faraday’s grip on the other man’s vest eases. He pushes away, giving them both a little more room to breathe.

When Vasquez mentions buying him a round, Faraday huffs out an embittered sort of laugh.

“Better make that a promise,” he grits out – because alcohol will always be a strong motivator for a man who prefers to spend his days half-corned. He finally lifts his head, taking stock of their surroundings. A chair nearby seems his best bet, and Faraday clenches his jaw as he points himself toward it. It’s a testament to how badly he feels that he doesn’t try to make it on his own, or that he doesn’t grouse about needing the help. Instead, Faraday wordlessly maneuvers himself so that Vasquez supports his bad side, an arm thrown around Vasquez’s shoulders to keep himself upright.
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-08-28 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Faraday grunts out some noise of gratitude when Vasquez leaves behind the matchbox and the cigarette, and Faraday avails himself of Vasquez’s generosity. With the cigarette perched between his lips, Faraday tries not to think too hard on the clumsy way he strikes the match against the striking surface of the box, or how disgustingly familiar it is to have that fix match snap in his shaking fingers. (He remembers blood and pain and cold, mounting dread that blackness might overtake him before he could perform his trick.) He lets the two pieces fall to the floor, and he kicks them away with his good leg and tries again. The second attempt, at least, is far more successful than the first, and he brings the lit match up to the cigarette, breathes in a mouthful of smoke and exhales it up to the ceiling.

Vasquez isn’t gone as long as Faraday might have figured, and not nearly long enough for Faraday to entertain the idea of standing, of stretching out the knotted, strained muscle of his bad leg. Instead, he kneads at his hip with the heel of his palm, cigarette held between the fingers of his other hand, and glances up when he hears the familiar tread of Vasquez’s step.

He’s come to recognize the weight of Vasquez’s footfalls on the wooden floors, the particular measure and weight of them. An odd thing, surely, and odder still to find comfort in the sound. Faraday doesn’t relax by any means, but when he spots Vasquez, he lets out a slow breath, smoke curling upward with the exhale. His expression doesn’t soften, but some of the hardness in his gaze fades away.

Faraday holds Vasquez’s matchbox out on the palm of his hand. “Here I thought you were all hot air,” he says, and he tries for something teasing, something to get Vasquez’s dander up. Instead, his voice comes out strained and exhausted.
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-08-29 05:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Considering Vasquez does the both of them the favor of retrieving glasses, the least Faraday can do is pour them their drinks. He grabs up the bottle, and with one hand still occupied in applying pressure to his aching leg, he uncorks the whiskey with his teeth, spitting the stopper onto the table, where it bounces and rolls to a stop at the edge. Faraday’s always head a heavy hand when it comes to pouring, and it shows in the healthy shares he doles out to the both of them. Setting the bottle aside in favor of the glass, Faraday knocks back a mouthful, sighing as the familiar burn works its way down his throat.

His gaze flits over to Vasquez at the unfamiliar words, and Faraday frowns on reflex. It’s just as well that Vasquez follows up in plain English, cutting off any possible complaints Faraday might have offered. As it is, Faraday considers denying it, just out of sheer, stubborn spite, but the both of them know the answer to Vasquez’s question. Lying about it won’t change the reality of it.

Faraday scowls down at his glass for a second before huffing out a frustrated sound. “Seized up on me,” he grits out. “That’s all.” And that’s putting it mildly, admittedly, but it’s as much of a concession as Faraday is likely to give.

He downs another mouthful, waiting for that warmth to pool in him. Drinking as often as he does means it will take some time yet before the liquor settles, before it starts loosening him up and taking away the worst of the pain. But sure enough, Vasquez starts fussing, and Faraday hasn’t had nearly enough whiskey yet to make the attention endearing rather than irritating.

“Stop that,” he snaps. “It’s a cramp, Vasquez. You’re actin’ like I’m some sickly granny stumblin’ out in the cold.”
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-01 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
Faraday blinks at Vasquez, startled by the words, by the heat in them. He had expected some lecture on his stupidity, on his stubbornness – old, familiar censures from his childhood, shouted at him by his mother, rest her soul. Their conversations were usually filled with barbs, with cheap potshots, with hardly any sincerity between them. But everything Vasquez just spouted off wasn’t on the script, was far too honest.

And Faraday, a man who talked in half-truths, smirking all the while, has no idea how to respond.

For a long while, he’s silent, staring at Vasquez blankly. The man might as well have spoken in his mother tongue, for all Faraday appears to comprehend him, but slowly, Faraday comes out of his daze, shaking himself.

“I don’t recall askin’ for help,” he croaks out. Moments ago, the words would have been cast out angrily, snapping like a chained dog. Now, however, his voice is uncertain, the words slow, like he’s testing each step and hoping for stable ground. He falls quiet again, staring down at the amber liquid in his glass, before gulps down another mouthful.

“Listen, Vasquez,” Faraday says, still slow, still uncertain. He pauses to wipe at the corner of his mouth with the back of his wrist. The admission he has to make is a bitter thing to say aloud, and for a second, he grimaces with it. He pushes himself onward, though. “Maybe I ain’t ready, after all. So if you’d rather move on...”
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-01 07:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Faraday snorts out a laugh at Vasquez’s obvious attempt at lightening the mood. He should probably remind the man that staying in one place this long likely wouldn’t do Vasquez any favors – especially considering eventually, someone with a folded slip of paper bearing a poor likeness was liable to come looking for him. But Vasquez had snapped at him earlier when Faraday had pointed that out, and while Faraday went looking for fights more often than not, this particularly fight doesn’t feel like one either of them would win.

He lifts his glass, looking to finish the whiskey off, but Vasquez captures his wrist. Faraday blinks at him, startled and puzzled by the contact all over again. Weeks ago, a move like that would have had Faraday drawing his guns on the other man, shooting first before bothering to ask any questions. Now, though, he feels his heart lurch in his chest, feels a strange spark kick up in his stomach, but Vasquez’s calloused hand pulls away before Faraday can properly examine that peculiar sensation.

“I stay another minute in this town,” he grumbles, setting the glass back on the table, “I’m gonna go mad.”

Domesticity and Faraday mix about as well as oil and water, after all. He made a habit of staying in towns until the well had run dry – which typically meant a handful of days. He’s been in Rose Creek for months, now, with hardly anything to keep him occupied.

“You can’t honestly tell me you’re not itchin’ to get out just as much as I am.”
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-03 08:44 am (UTC)(link)
Faraday bites down on any protests that rise up in his throat. He ought to insist that Vasquez move on without him; a man looking to keep out of the noose shouldn't stand still long enough to let it settle around his neck. But Faraday has always been a selfish man, and when it hardly seems to occur to Vasquez that leaving on his own is an option, Faraday keeps his trap shut.

He follows suit in finishing off his glass of whiskey, and he deposits the empty tumbler back on the table. Vasquez's offer earns a slightly uncertain look.

"Most of me's healed up," Faraday reminds the other man. A few parts of him are still sewn shut, but even those bits are more healed than not; the wounds were unlikely to open up again, unless Faraday really set his mind to it (which he absolutely could, given it's Faraday.) It's the lingering aches and pains that are proving difficult to handle, even if Faraday refuses to admit as much aloud. It's the weakness that's settled into his bones that's holding him back.

He peers at Vasquez for a second, studying him. Then cautiously, he asks, "What is it the doctor showed you how to do, exactly?"
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-04 03:03 am (UTC)(link)
The hesitation before Vasquez speaks seems a bit telling, and the frown stays fixed on Faraday's face. The other man offers his explanation, and judging by the skeptical look Faraday casts him, Faraday seems to number himself among those who disagree with this physician.

"Sounds like it'd just make things worse," he says slowly. If the muscle already aches, Faraday's not entirely certain if poking at it will make things much better. Then again, Faraday's not qualified to offer his thoughts on most things, aside from shooting or gambling, so what does he know?

He rolls his eyes at Vasquez's joke. "I can think of at least a dozen mugs a far sight easier on the eyes than yours, amigo," Faraday says, giving a vague wave of his hand toward the front door of the establishment. (Granted, he can think of them – a number of them were saloon girls whose name he's half-forgotten with time – but it doesn't necessarily mean he'd prefer their company to Vasquez's. But hell if he'll let the bastard know that.)

Faraday lets out a sigh, scrubbing at his face.

"So?" and the word comes out on an exhale. "We givin' this a shot?"
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-05 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
Faraday's eyes narrow at that open shock on Vasquez's face, at his suggestion of moving somewhere more private. Just what was it that Vasquez was intending to do, exactly?

When Vasquez stands with obvious agitation, with his skin coloring with a sudden blush, Faraday can't help but stare at him, equal parts curious and startled. He's not sure if he's ever seen Vasquez quite like this, caught somewhere between wanting to bolt and staying put out of stubbornness. And Faraday, meanwhile, is caught between wanting to tease the other man relentlessly and keeping his gob shut.

And that's an effort for Faraday, keeping his mouth shut so he doesn't stick a foot in it, but somehow, he manages it. Still, he tucks the thoughts away for later, and carefully gets to his feet. He keeps his weight leaned to one side, his injured leg still smarting something awful if he stops favoring it, and keeps a hand on the edge of the table to help balance himself.

"Might as well head back up," he says slowly, casting the stairs a baleful glare before returning his attention to the other man. He observes Vasquez with his usual sharpshooter's stare. "Seems you don't wanna risk us runnin' into anyone, and the room upstair's about as private as we're gonna get."
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-05 06:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Vasquez is being odd.

Faraday’s frown deepens as he watches the other man. The man is acting as though Faraday’s discovered some old, embarrassing, childhood secret, with the way he’s posturing and steeling himself. If this is how Vasquez is going to react whenever Faraday takes a chance on being reasonable, Faraday’s not quite sure if he ought to agree with him more or less often. Admittedly, there is something a little funny about the way Vasquez falters, and even as Faraday watches Vasquez with narrowed eyes, a small smile tugs at the corner of his lips.

And apparently the amusement is enough to smooth away the barbed mess of his pride, and he accepts Vasquez’s help up the stairs with little complaint, one arm slung over Vasquez’s shoulders. It’s just as well, considering the trek down had done few favors for his energy; by the time they reach the upper floor, Faraday is exhausted all over again, teeth clenched against the ache of his bad leg.

When they make it back to the privacy of Faraday’s room, Faraday collapses onto his bed, sitting on the edge of the mattress. He wipes at his brow with the back of his wrist, the knuckles of his other hand digging into the knotted muscle of his thigh.

As with most things, the pain just makes Faraday angry, and he grits out, “Damned leg.”
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-08 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Evidently it’s one thing to accept Vasquez’s offer; it’s an entirely different thing to accept his help. He watches Vasquez move around the room, gathering up his resolve like water collects other droplets on a window pane. It’s odd, it’s worrying, and Faraday’s jaw tics as he forces himself to swallow his own pride.

At Vasquez’s prompting, as Vasquez’s hand rests against his shoulder and hip, Faraday resists for a few seconds – mostly out of stubbornness – but he lays himself down on the bed, eyes narrowed as he watches Vasquez’s every move. Faraday feels exposed in a way he doesn’t quite appreciate. He trusts the other man with his life – that much was certain – but their current positions are precarious. It’s like wandering out onto the frozen surface of a lake, wondering if the ice will bear their weight, each step tentative and wary.

But soon enough, Vasquez sets in, fingers digging into the knotted muscle, and a pained grunt punches itself out through gritted teeth. It hurts, it aches, and even if Faraday knows it’s for the best, his initial instinct is to lash out, to curl up an protect himself like a wounded animal. He doesn’t, though, instead forcing his hands to twist into the covers on the bed, knuckles turning white and bloodless with the strength of his grip.

“I ain’t that delicate,” Faraday bites out. “It’s fine.”
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-11 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Faraday scowls on instinct when Vasquez snaps at him. He would never admit it, but it’s better that Vasquez respond with that same fire – if there had been anything approaching pity, he would have put a stop to all of this and kicked Vasquez out to tend to his wounded pride.

As it is, it’s Faraday clenches his jaw, fingers twisted so tightly into the sheets that his hand shake. He holds his breath in his lungs as the pain sharpens and fades with each pass of Vasquez’s ministrations. It’s better, he thinks, though it feels as though it’s ages before it reaches that point, and he slowly lets the breath out through his lips.

“It’s fine,” he repeats, though his voice isn’t quite as strained as it had been the last time he said those words. Exhausted, sure, but not nearly as pained. He licks his lips, props himself up on an elbow. “The hell’s that mean? ‘Guapo.’” And he repeats back the word with his usual clumsy accent. Naturally, he assumes it’s a brand new insult, and Faraday bristles at it.
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-15 07:21 am (UTC)(link)
Faraday grunts out a noise of frustration. He hardly knows why he asks, at this point; it's been months, and Vasquez still hasn't explained what "guero" meant. Why would he explain this brand new nickname?

His grousing is interrupted when Vasquez turns that wooden thing on his leg – something Faraday can only describe as some sort of peculiar rolling pin – and a noise of discomfort is punched out of him again. His teeth catch on his lower lip, caging in any other pained noises he might make, but as Vasquez works at it, the pain fades. It still aches, of course, but the knotted mess has eased, and moving his leg doesn't seem like such a tall order anymore.

Vasquz's swears – foreign as they are – catch Faraday's attention, and despite all his complaints about Vasquez's fussing earlier, a concern flashes in Faraday's eyes. He hisses as he sits up a little, green eyes darting to where Vasquez's hand runs over the old wound on his arm.

His own concern is enough to override the instinctive annoyance at Vasquez's verbal jab. Rather than battle back with an insult of his own, he instead asks, "You doin' alright?"
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[personal profile] peacemakers 2017-09-15 05:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Faraday hardly looks convinced by Vasquez’s weak attempt at reassurance, and his lips press into a thin line as he studies the other man. Faraday’s made his life on reading other men, and he recognizes the strained quality of Vasquez’s smile, the fine tremor in Vasquez’s hands – either from pain or from exhaustion. His expression darkens into a frown, eyes narrowed and the corners of his mouth turning downward in disapproval.

Vasquez backs away as if to make to retreat, and Faraday continues to study him. Carefully, Faraday sits up the rest of the way, swinging his legs over the edge of the mattress to sit up properly. He runs his hand over the old bullet wound on his thigh – still sore, but nowhere near the screaming, knotted mess of just moments ago. He takes a deep, steadying breath, wiping sweat from his brow with the back of his other hand.

“I don’t got a destination in mind,” Faraday says. He glances up at the other man, lifting his shoulders in a shrug. “Never have.”

He tended to let chance and caprice guide him, following trails and stopping whenever his coffers needed padding or if he desired company. Now, with the reward for protecting Rose Creek lining his pockets and with Vasquez riding beside him (infuriating as the man may be), Faraday wonders if he’ll have much need of stopping into towns as he used to.

“You got any ideas?”

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