in the beginning
Jan. 25th, 2016 12:45 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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It's a simple conversation at the hospital. She comes to tell him that she's leaving; it's not that he owes her a goodbye or that she wanted him to make her stay. Honestly, it's that she wants to see him alive after everything that happened. Too much blood; it still stained her shirt, but she'd never wear those clothes again anyhow.
They were wadded up in the trashcan at the boardinghouse, the rest of her clothes neatly in her suitcase. She's not sure where she's going to go now - there were some rooms for rent Atlanta. The world seemed to be getting smaller and smaller since the automobiles were getting more popular, but she figured that Georgia should be far enough. No one would know her - not the deputy, not the Bonderants, and especially not anyone from Chicago.
So she saw him. Still alive, still too pale but she wasn't particularly picky. What she hadn't expected-- well. Honestly Maggie didn't expect much when it came to Forrest - not that she didn't hold him in high regard, but it was more that she never actually knew what he would say when he actually opened his mouth.
That she should stay at the station - that he wanted to keep her safe-- it made her hesitate.
And then for some reason, she said yes.
Her steps from the hospital were sure even though she had a hundred questions if she had one, and her brows furrowed as she hesitated, pulling out a cigarette and lighting it, her hands cupped to block the wind, her suitcase by her T-strap heels.
When she looked up from lighting her cigarette, she nearly screamed.
Gone were the green trees and breeze. Gone was everything she'd known, and now she stood in a hallway that was completely unfamiliar, with electric lights along the ceiling. She'd not seen waste like that since she'd left Chicago, and she bent to pick up her bag, frozen like a deer because she was so overwhelmed.
"Hey, get out of the way!" She stepped back from the young woman who was carrying a basket full of clothes, but she couldn't not stare, given that she was barely wearing any clothing. Still, Maggie did what she could; she stopped her. She got information. She got her envelope, her apartment-- she'd appeared right in front of the door. Fumbling with her key, she squinted as she tried to get the unfamiliar key in the keyhole, her mind awhirl. She hadn't realised that while she'd appeared in front of her apartment, the one across the hall? It was rented out some three weeks ago by one James Forrest Bondarant.
They were wadded up in the trashcan at the boardinghouse, the rest of her clothes neatly in her suitcase. She's not sure where she's going to go now - there were some rooms for rent Atlanta. The world seemed to be getting smaller and smaller since the automobiles were getting more popular, but she figured that Georgia should be far enough. No one would know her - not the deputy, not the Bonderants, and especially not anyone from Chicago.
So she saw him. Still alive, still too pale but she wasn't particularly picky. What she hadn't expected-- well. Honestly Maggie didn't expect much when it came to Forrest - not that she didn't hold him in high regard, but it was more that she never actually knew what he would say when he actually opened his mouth.
That she should stay at the station - that he wanted to keep her safe-- it made her hesitate.
And then for some reason, she said yes.
Her steps from the hospital were sure even though she had a hundred questions if she had one, and her brows furrowed as she hesitated, pulling out a cigarette and lighting it, her hands cupped to block the wind, her suitcase by her T-strap heels.
When she looked up from lighting her cigarette, she nearly screamed.
Gone were the green trees and breeze. Gone was everything she'd known, and now she stood in a hallway that was completely unfamiliar, with electric lights along the ceiling. She'd not seen waste like that since she'd left Chicago, and she bent to pick up her bag, frozen like a deer because she was so overwhelmed.
"Hey, get out of the way!" She stepped back from the young woman who was carrying a basket full of clothes, but she couldn't not stare, given that she was barely wearing any clothing. Still, Maggie did what she could; she stopped her. She got information. She got her envelope, her apartment-- she'd appeared right in front of the door. Fumbling with her key, she squinted as she tried to get the unfamiliar key in the keyhole, her mind awhirl. She hadn't realised that while she'd appeared in front of her apartment, the one across the hall? It was rented out some three weeks ago by one James Forrest Bondarant.
no subject
Date: 2016-01-25 06:52 am (UTC)Now, in her red dress, with her suitcase, she seemed a world away from him. He wanted, desperately, to comfort her, but he didn't have the first idea how, or even what he would've been comforting her for.
"Lucky, hm. Yep," he croaked, hands in the pockets of his loose-fitting cardigan. He'd dropped his trash bag by the door, and hadn't even noticed.
no subject
Date: 2016-01-25 07:54 pm (UTC)"Everything seems so strange." That summed it up - both the place, the cars, the people-- all of it seemed absolutely foreign to her. Even just the key and the way it fit into the lock was a mystery, and she never thought she'd be confused by something so simple.
no subject
Date: 2016-01-26 05:26 am (UTC)"I don't mean to scare you, Maggie, but this place? It don't get any clearer. Strange is where we're gonna be livin' for some time. We best get used to it."
no subject
Date: 2016-01-26 05:43 am (UTC)Forrest was different than most people, and definitely wasn't part of the 'public'.
"Well then," she said after a long moment of staring up at him, "I suppose that means that I'll need to find a job." She's always been practical, almost to a fault. It'd served her well what to her was two nights ago - getting him to the hospital, getting herself home, but now it was near to the only thing she had to fall back on.
no subject
Date: 2016-01-26 05:53 am (UTC)More than anything, he wanted to be back at the station. The rest of it, he could've done without. But having her behind his counter, pouring the coffee, was what he'd missed the most, over the last weeks.
"I should." He frowned, his gaze dropping away from her face. He turned and picked up his fallen trashbag. "Just gonna." He gestured down the hall, toward the stairwell. The cans were on the first floor. "You go on, get inside, now."
no subject
Date: 2016-01-26 06:00 am (UTC)"If you need anything, all you have to do is knock." She knows he likely won't - he's not ever been the sort of person who troubles others for their time when it's not for dire reasons, or to start a conversation. Still, the invitation's there because she honestly does want him to take it.
Licking he lips, she continues. "And Forrest... I"m glad you're here." The words are soft but said with conviction because it'd been so close to him not making it through. She'd honestly thought that she'd watch him die, what with blood seeping from his throat once she'd gotten him to her car. She understood it now - he was too stubborn to die, and honestly she was thankful. That add to it that here's actually here?
He would have been the one regret she'd have about moving to Atlanta. It's a gift, and one she's not planning to squander.
She stoops to pick up her keys, and while it's still a struggle with the new way they apparently make locks, she finally gets the door open. Picking up her suitcase to let herself inside, she hesitates, even though he's already started down the hall. "Good night, Forrest."