Seven Devils Logs

"SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES."

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Posts Tagged: 'austin+jonson'

Jul. 4th, 2020


[info]sheriffs
[info]sevendevilslog

[info]sheriffs
[info]sevendevilslog

eyes of yellow


[info]sheriffs
[info]sevendevilslog

REX HILTS + AUSTIN JONSON
trespassing and spiders
JULY 2nd - around midnight | Abandoned Firehouse | PG-13
Read more... )

This was going great.

Abandoned buildings weren’t that hard to come by in Seven Devils, although most of the town was used with old businesses and facing a little bit of renovations for the new wave of residents to come in, a large portion of the town was inhabited. But there were areas that weren’t.

One building that seemed kind of ominous was an old fire house, probably dating back to the early 1900’s, before the current firehouse in town was built. The glass around the oversized entrance was broken in some places and filthy in others, near impossible to see through. The gaping opening of what had once been the firehouse door almost looked like a yawning maw. It looked like a very bad idea.

But people had supposedly heard wailing from inside, soft cries, almost like a baby. Despite the fact that literally no one had been in there for years.

There was the chance that it was just people hearing things, so Austin had set up a recording device on the edge of the property the night before and collected it in the morning, expecting nothing. Instead, it picked up the soft wailing of someone at around 3am, lasting until just just after 4am.

Naturally, Austin was there that night, stepping through some of the open spaces to get inside, flashlight running over the initial area to make sure it wasn’t just homeless people holing up inside to escape the elements. Nothing looked disturbed though; the building was old and dusty, creaking and decrepit looking.

So naturally, Austin climbed the stairs, wanting to see if there was something in the upstairs office. Except he got half way up the second flight when the wooden panels gave out from under his feet. He’d narrowly gotten up to the top, but it did mean the stairs were just a hole, one he couldn’t jump over to get back across.

Cool. Great. Awesome, it’s fine, really.

Fire Stations have firepoles. He’d just… find that. Everything was great.




When he’d gotten the call from a concerned citizen about suspicious lights around the old abandoned firehouse, Rex rolled his eyes and dragged his hand down his face in preemptive frustration. Even before he reached the scene or had even gotten up from his desk chair and the stack of paperwork — he knew.

Goddamn kids,” he muttered as he grabbed his hat and headed for his vehicle, not saying a word to anyone left in the office this late.

The werewolf sped off in the direction of the more beat-up side of town; no sirens, no lights, no radio. Nothing. In fact, he’d shut the headlights off as he pulled onto the road the firehouse was on. “Goddamn kids,” he repeated to himself through gritted teeth. The animosity behind his words was weak - at the end of the day he’d rather respond to a trespassing call than something more sinister.

Rex damn near coasted his vehicle to the front of the building, rolling the window down so he could take a long sniff of the air. The young man’s scent familiar by now - unfortunately. Of course it was Austin. Who else would be wandering around abandoned buildings at night looking for proof of ghosts and meth addicts or whatever it was that the young man was after. He sure as shit wasn’t getting out of the vehicle if he didn’t need to. He could just argue with the kid to give up and get in the passenger seat.. Hopefully.

The kid was pretty good at arguing.

Still, he decided to have a little fun with the paranormal investigator before he ruined his night. With his window rolled down, Rex stuck his head out and gave his best howl. Which, given he was a werewolf was pretty damn good. He fell silent and waited for a noise or movement, or both.




There was a smallish office at the back end of the upper floor, maybe where the fire pole thing would be, so Austin was carefully making his way towards that, stopping periodically when he heard something move or there was a creak in the building.

It wasn’t unusual, old buildings made noises, the wind could’ve brushed something against a door or window, debris could move through the building. But every now and then, Austin was sure he heard a tap, like something hitting against the walls or floor, a pipe or stick or something metal just tap tap tapping at things.

And then he hears the howl. And drops his flashlight. Which then rolls away somewhere. “Fuck.”

Austin had heard that there were wolves in Seven Devils, he’d heard there was a pack, heard they were secretive, heard they roamed the woods. He had heard all this. But actually running into wolf territory was something entirely different and he’d thought he’d been good about that so far -spending a few hours with one pack that was begrudgingly not going to kill you because of the accidental good deed you did years before only allowed for some information gathering.

As it was, Austin was now in the dark, unsure what way was out and close to hyperventilating for the potential evisceration that was probably coming his way. “Fuck.”




In the silence that followed his howl, Rex heard the clunk of the flashlight hitting the ground and laughed softly to himself.

It took a little while for the scent of Austin’s dismay to waft his way — ironically just enough time for him to reach his arm out and positive his spotlight so it pointed directly at the building. He could have been exceptionally cruel and turned the siren on briefly so it gave a yelp in the dark - but thinking ahead, he was going to have to escort Austin home and he didn’t want shit on his seat.

Hearing the second fuck, Rex grinned widely and turned his overhead speaker on before grabbing the handheld microphone. He waited a few moments before turning on the spotlight and illuminating the front of the building in a bright, white light.

He disguised his voice; took out the Texan drawl, made him sound more robotic - more like a cop. “Exit the building slowly with your hands in the air,” he instructed.




The sudden burst of light had Austin stumbling back, tripping over a pipe along the floor and landing hard on his ass, hand out to try and catch his fall but just hitting more debris, “Aw, fuck man.” At least if one of the cops were outside, he’d probably not get mauled by wolves.

He was about to try and work his way downstairs, just so that whoever had been sent out didn’t get pissed off at him, when something moved behind him, a shadow shifting and a small round pebble rolled along the floor before the shadow was gone.

Without his flashlight, that he still couldn’t see, even with the glow from the light from outside, Austin was a little hesitant to follow the shadow, especially with the cop outside, but there was a chance that this was something or even someone hanging around. “Fuck, fuck, fuck.” Pulling himself up caused a twinge in his wrist, but Austin ignored it and followed to the back of the building where the main area of the second floor led into another, smaller and impossibly dark room.

“Hello?” Okay, maybe someone was using this place for shelter, hiding out, that’d make sense. He glanced back towards the light, wondering if he should try to find his flashlight again. And then something creaked in the room, and Austin’s heart almost stopped. “Hello?” It was a much quieter question that time, a tiny hint of fear in his voice, because this room was entirely empty.




Hearing the scuffle made Rex laugh, with the microphone off of course. Readjusting his hat with his free hand he waited for Austin’s embarrassed and annoyed face to slink from out the entrance of the building.

And he waited… and waited…..

It wasn’t until Rex caught the scent of blood in the air that he realized something wasn’t quite right. “Goddamn kid!” he snapped quickly, more out of annoyance than anything and put the microphone down in exchange for a flashlight of his own. Of course he was going to make this a big ordeal. Exiting the vehicle, Rex unbuttoned the holster of his gun but kept it on his belt for now as he approached the entrance.

Even as a werewolf, his eyes took a few seconds to adjust to the lighting and shadows as he slipped inside the building. Clicking the flashlight on, Rex began to sweep the area and clear it before moving further inside and toward where he’d heard the kid’s voice.




If he’d been paying better attention, Austin would’ve heard movement down the stairs, not that he could’ve gotten down that way or anything, he wasn’t about the hang from the stairs to try and get to the floor, or jumping and breaking his foot or something. That’d just ruin the night entirely.

Instead he was trying to find out where the movements were coming from, something like scratching, a little tap tap noise. He kicked a box that was sitting on the ground, hissing a little as his shin protesting from the knock. His hiss seemed to trigger something, since there was more skittering, a scratch noise and Austin was absolutely sure he’d never find the way out it was so fucking dark.

“Not weird, not scary, Jesus fuck.” He should’ve figured out how to get out when he could’ve, maybe the cop would wait a while, maybe they’d leave. Oh, shit what if he got shot and eaten tonight? That’d really suck.

Something moved beside his head, dangling from the ceiling and then gone, making Austin stumble back until he hit a wall, the steady stream of curses falling from his mouth.




Abandoned buildings were all the same in Rex’s book - so it was safe to say he was pretty oblivious to the real reasons why Austin was rooting around the cobwebs and dust. Which, there seemed to be an awful lot of as he needed to reach up and pull the sticky material from the brim of his hat more than once already.

Hearing Austin’s voice, Rex turned his flashlight off and made his way up the stairs - not intentionally trying, to get the jump on the kid, but because he actively heard something skittering around.

And it smelled weird.

His biggest worry was that the kid had gotten bit by whatever was in the building and that maybe it had rabies and, well that’d lead to a whole thing with animal control in the morning and really, Rex just wanted a simple night with as little paperwork as possible and—

Pop. Pop pop.

The Sheriff drew his gun and fired the instant he saw the large arachnid-looking creature stalking up to Austin, who was only a stone’s throw away from him.




Just as Austin was about to turn, completely sure he’d seen something, there was the sharp pop of gunfire, Austin automatically flinching back further into the wall and ducking, like it might save him from anything.

Stunned barely covered it, his ears ringing from the sudden noise as his eyes tried to adjust to what the hell was going on, “Oh my god,” of course it would be the Sheriff that was sent out to respond to the trespassing call, because obviously it was a trespassing call, “What are you shooting at?!” Yelling wasn’t the best idea, but at the same time he almost had to, his heart was thumping, the noise of blood rushing in his ears pretty much all he could focus on too.

“How did you even get up here?” He could barely make out the Sheriff, just the hat and his general shadow, the light from outside dull this far back into the building. “Is there another set of stairs?” That’d be helpful, Austin didn’t want to have to shimmy down a fucking disgusting pole with a cut up hand either.

“Jesus I think I’m fucking deaf.” He should maybe also not sass a cop as much as he did, but the adrenaline was overwriting literally all of his common sense right then.




Even as a werewolf Rex was used to the sound of a gun in close range. And within a building. Needless to say, he heard everything Austin blurted out in shock — but honestly even he wasn’t quite sure what he just saw. It was enough that he clicked his flashlight back on and swept the room with the beam.

Gun still in hand, but finger understandably off the trigger, he pointed the light in Austin’s direction but it was pointing at his feet.

“There was a giant spider about to chew your face off!” he said loudly through gritted teeth - trying not to yell back at the kid but wanting to stress he had good reason to fire.

“No?” Rex replied in confusion when asked about another set of stairs. “And you’re not deaf, you’re just not used to it.” He all but rolled his eyes as he glanced around again - the scent of blood hitting his nostrils again. The light shown on Austin once more. “You hurt yourself? Or get bit by somethin’?” he questioned in a brief moment of concern before he was reminded that he really had no business snooping around.

“What the hell are you even doing here?!”




Giant spider? Giant spider!

Fuck, where was the giant spider? “Did you hit it, where is it? What did it look like?” There were possibilities with ‘giant spider’ that something was wrong and someone had migrated with one of Australia's deadly beasts. Or it was a fucking mutated spider of some kind from testing, or a cryptid, or just a really big asshole of a spider, but… Well he’d need to see that to know.

They needed more light, although he was shuffling to try and see if he could see a spider body on the ground. If Rex shot at it, well, it had to be relatively large, right?

He’d missed the whole ‘no’ at a second set of stairs, brain not quite catching that while it was working on giant fucking spider the it skipped ‘he must be a ninja’ in the process. “I hurt my hand,” he raised it again to check, the bleeding on the heel of his hand sluggish now, but the dirt was probably a bad thing, “it’s fine I think, just cut it on something.” Don’t mention tetanus, don’t mention tetanus.

“Um… can I plead the fifth on that one?” He’d gotten a little further from the wall he’d tried to sink into, still shuffling his feet a little to try and hit the spider body that way, but pretty sure Rex could’ve just made that up to scare him -it worked, but it was still a dick move if it was made up.




What did it look like?

Rex was fully sidetracked for a moment, ignoring Austin’s freakout as he lowered his gun and stared in near disbelief. “I don’t know, and I thought ‘giant spider’ was pretty descriptive,” he snarked in return.

When Austin raised his hand, Rex pointed the flashlight more directly. He had a first aid kit in his car but… all that dirt, and the amount of rust and grime covering the interior wasn’t exactly something a simple dousing of isopropyl alcohol could fix. Fuck, he thought, realizing his night had just been extended as he’d need to take him to the hospital for a tetanus shot before going to the station.

“I asked you to come out and you didn’t listen so… no, no you cannot,” the Sheriff explained. He’d lost that privilege when he made the werewolf come in after him, really. “And don’t say you’re looking for giant spiders because I know it’s a lie,” Rex added with a shake of his head.




Giant spider was descriptive, sure, but all it meant was ‘big with 8 legs’ really, “Okay but was it like a giant spider like from a movie or a giant spider like ‘that’s just a big ass spider’ or like something from Alien?” There were so many possibilities and some of them were either within the supernatural or fell into conspiracy theory territory. If he could get a picture, Cass might know if there were mentions of them online somewhere. But then a thought occurred. “Spiders usually lay like thousands of eggs.” It stopped him dead in his tracks because giant spider babies. Fuck but that was more terrifying.

The telling off for not coming out, okay, he expected that but… “I couldn’t. The stairs are broken, I was… How did you get up here? There’s a giant hole in the stairs? I was trying to find a way out when… Well, when I heard some things and thought maybe… y’know. Ghosts?”

It always felt weird explaining it. Even though Rex was aware by now that Austin went to weird places to play ghost buster. He was way more into it since Morgan had told him they 100% did exist and that some of them liked to fuck with the living. “I’m still not sure how to get out, by the way. Since I’m not a fucking ninja who can leap over gaping holes.”




Again, a look of confusion from the Sheriff at the quickfire detail-oriented questions. Pretty much all of it lost on him as he didn’t really watch many movies with giant spiders. A personal choice. But then Austin had to go and mention spider eggs and well, that was enough for Rex. “Okay, enough with bullshit. They were really big spiders.”

Ah shit, the stairs.

“You can’t finagle your way down? Christ, I got almost fifteen years on you and I can make it down,” he insisted, trying to brush it all off like it was normal and his being a werewolf had nothing to do with his stealth. He took a step, his foot bumping the flashlight Austin had dropped. “Ghosts?” he asked as he bent down and snagged the light, turning it on and handing it over. “You came into an abandoned building, alone, with one flashlight, thinking you were going to catch ghosts?” Rex said, wondering if it sounded as ridiculous to Austin as it did to him.

Rex grinned faintly, shining a light on the hole in the steps he’d managed to clear. “If you want I can catch you with my mad ninja skills?” he offered teasingly. Obviously they’d have to use the firepole, as disgusting as it may be.




Okay, he’d just… He could chalk the giant spiders up to nope, nope, nope in this particular case, because he did not want thousands of baby spiders of any side swarming. That shit was enough to make him itchy as it was.

“I tripped over a pipe and busted my hand, attempting to get down those stairs will likely result in breaking at least one bone. Possibly more.” Because that was how Austin’s life worked. Apparently getting used to pain meant he was going to deal with it all the way through his life. “I’d rather not crush the Sheriff because of flailing limbs and have to listen to someone yell at me for that.”

He was more than okay with getting out of this place, but he’d rather be in one piece to do it, since he’d already gotten injured as it was. “Don’t make it sound like I’m the opening sequence to a horror movie, okay. Yes, it was dumb, no I wasn’t thinking about the long term, and also I already recorded some stuff so it was plausible.” He hated explaining shit to skeptics, or just people who frowned on casual trespassing. “Can we get out of here before you judge me? And also can you silently judge me?”

He was definitely okay with leaving, the itchy sensation was going to drive him crazy.




Apart from his otherwise unamused look, Rex rolled his eyes a little when the kid said he’d tripped. “Well you’re already going to the hospital so why not,” he offered with an indifferent tone, shining his flashlight to a corner where he thought he saw movement.

Giant spiders, or whatever they were, smelled musty and terrible.

“Crush me? You’re what, 150 pounds soaking wet?” he scoffed jokingly as he moved over toward the firepole. Rex inspected it as best he could in the light before grimacing faintly. It certainly wasn’t going to be a smooth trip down, that was for sure. “But you are the opening sequence of a horror movie,” he commented. The paint was chipped, and there was heavy rust in some spots, but thankfully they were both wearing long sleeves.

Rex pointed the flashlight at Austin’s chest, adding; “And I don’t even watch horror movies.”

The Sheriff holstered his gun finally and clipped his flashlight to his belt so it was aimed at the ground. “No promises,” he told Austin as he looped an arm and a leg loosely around the firepole, pushing off with his opposite foot and sliding down.




He’d say he was more likely the interlude, maybe the flashback, he was probably the flashback where they explained how things got so terrible. Because some idiot kid got the giant spider mama shot and killed and that was why the thousands of baby spiders were seeking revenge on the whole town.

Fuck. Stop thinking it.

“I could totally crush someone, I just have to land weird and boom, broken neck.” Although he did wonder if that was some kind of comment on how scrawny he was. Whatever, he couldn’t help it.

He was mostly annoyed at the cool parting line before Rex made it look like they weren’t about to slide down a horribly out of use and old pole that probably had some kind of bacteria all over it. “Seriously.” How was he a bit part in his own fucking life? Oh, right. Stupid choices.

Wrapping his sleeves around his hands, keeping as much of himself away from the pole as possible, Austin made a far less graceful descent to the ground, with many stops and starts. “Ow.” It didn’t really matter that he got blood all over his sleeve, because he was officially burning his clothes later, so that was going to be fun. “Hey, is setting controlled fires in backyards illegal here?” Best check just now? “Asking for a friend.”




The firepole was a bit more shaky than he’d like - but it got him from A to B and that was all that mattered. Although, when his feet hit the floor and he stepped away, he noticed his sleeve was dirtied. “I liked this shirt,” he muttered, mostly to himself with a hint of sadness in his tone. He rubbed and swatted at the fabric as best he could to get a good majority of it off.

Looking up, Rex expected Austin to be directly behind him but -upon flipping the light up to shine the way- he noticed there were…. issues with his descent.

“The only people allowed to set controlled fires would be the fire department and judging how you’re handling that pole, you’re not cut out for it,” Rex told him, his hands on his hips as he watched.

“If you ain’t down in 2.5 seconds I’m shooting you down,” the werewolf said, thinking the feigned threat would light a quintessential fire under his ass.




“Oh, I’m so not cut out to be a firefighter,” he started again, grabbing the pole and just shuffling down, ignoring how it was shaking and getting far enough that he could let go and only stumble a little bit rather than break his neck. “I’d fail the psych test.”

His own shirt was just as messed up, and Austin started to use a hand to wipe at it before remembering the open wound and deciding to not get it even more infected than needed.

“I lost my flashlight.” He looked up at the other floor forlornly, now that the light was giving the area a backsplash he could see the gaping hole in the stairs better and just how had Rex gotten up there? And acted like it was nothing special, there was at least three feet between the steps, on an incline, and it didn’t look in the least bit stable either. Austin was just trying to figure out if Rex had fucking hovered up there or something.

“So who should I tell to burn my clothes?”




“Good to know,” Rex said, though understandably concerned Austin was sure he’d fail the psych test. He’d definitely fail the physical portion; staying calm under pressure while in a room full of smoke and having to find his way out. Moments prior he’d been ready to freak out about getting out of the building.

Though giant spiders didn’t help.

“Be glad it was the only casualty tonight,” he said gruffly as he led them out of the building finally. Where the night air was cooler and less musty. “You do realize that you don’t have some kind of unspoken punch card for every time I fire my weapon because of you, right?” the Sheriff said only half-jokingly. The amount of paperwork he had to do from discharging his weapon, while mentioning Austin, was getting absurd. And there was definitely no prize for a certain amount of times it happened.

“Just.. throw ‘em away like a normal adult,” he shrugged faintly, shutting his flashlight off as he approached his vehicle once more. “Front seat. Don’t touch anything and try not to bleed on anything,” Rex told him as he got into the driver’s seat and quickly told the station over his radio that they’d be going to the ER for a minor injury.




His pride tended to be the biggest casualty at any rate, regardless of what it was he was doing. As a result he usually didn’t care too much for the trouble he got himself into or the way he ended up getting out of it, or who had to shoehorn him out of the trouble in the first place. He was pretty sure that was evident by now.

“Wait, I don’t? I thought like I got one of those badges if I filled up the card. Wasn’t it ten firearm discharges and I got an honorary badge?” At least his wit wasn’t so shaken that he’d just mumble an apology, that’d probably happen when they got to the ER and he got his hand cleaned out and the nurses gave him those looks because why was he wandering around in dirty places in the dark?

At least he wasn’t getting shoved off into the back where Rex could just ignore him, he was grateful enough for that fact that he sat down and quietly put the seatbelt on without complaint, peeling back his sleeve to get a look at his hand.

Probably wouldn’t scar, just need a stitch or two probably, the stuff in it was the ickiest part. It took a lot to not pick at it, just dabbing at the corners with a bit of his shirt that wasn’t wrecked. “Do you like, have a sixth sense when it’s me up to something that means you show up?” More often than not it was Rex that ended up glaring at him for the latest idiocy that occurred, and he was genuinely curious if that was some kind of karma or if Rex just knew when he was doing something dumb.




Rex cast Austin an unamused look in the dark when he commented about an honorary badge. “No, but you get honorary rides in police vehicles and a tour of the station,” he insisted, shutting the spotlight off and taking the vehicle out of park.

As he began to back out of the spot, he glanced down at the young man’s hand, his lips twisting with discomfort even looking at it.

The question warranted a snicker from the werewolf as he started to drive off in the direction of the Emergency Room. “Anymore when the call comes in for someone being in a place they’re not supposed to be I automatically assume it’s you,” he admitted. “I’m looking forward to the day that I’m pleasantly surprised with a stranger instead.”

At least now he expected to see the kid rooting around abandoned buildings and stretches of woods he had no reason to be in. “Would it kill you to give the station a call ahead of time so I could just… ignore it and finish my paperwork?” he asked with a certain annoyance back in his tone.




Austin had to ponder that for a minute, it wasn’t like it was bad, the cop rides tended to be way less stressful than taking public transport, that was for sure. Even if he wasn’t allowed to touch any of the gear at all. Which, y’know, rude. Fair. But rude.

Automatically just assuming the trespassing calls were Austin was probably telling in how often Austin was reported -more often than not he got a lift home from where he’d been in a cop car, and that was probably not the best way to do things, but it did mean he wasn’t hauling his butt home at 3am, tired and sore from whatever he’d been doing. “I feel like I should be insulted, but that’s probably a good system to have.” He wasn’t about to say ‘don’t assume it’s me’ because that might mean more firearms.

The comment about calling ahead, to warn them that he was going to be an idiot, it seemed a lot like calling the bank before the robbery. “Well, I sorta assumed if I ever did that,” his shoulders shrugged a tiny bit, probably missed in the car while Rex was driving, Austin giving in the compulsion and picking a little at the corner of the cut on his hand, just picking some of the grit out, “Y’know, I’’d get told not to?” Which seemed fair, really. It was trespassing, even if he’d never gone to a residence since the Funeral Home, which, thankfully, hadn’t been reported.




All things considered, he was lucky that Austin was otherwise a relatively good guy. He never vandalized the sites, and apparently apart from breaking a few things, he left them otherwise undisturbed. His previous comment about starting a fire to burn his clothes was a little concerning, but as far as trespassing went he couldn’t rightfully charge the kid or even really fine him.

“Yeah but would you really bother listening?” Rex countered as Austin brought up the fact that calling ahead would be met with warnings. He knew the answer, since they’d literally done this multiple times now - surely Austin had no intentions of stopping. Plus there were all the times that a complaint was never called in and Rex was none the wiser.

Glancing over, Rex happened to notice the picking and rather than lecture the kid about it - lest he be accused of judging... The Sheriff braced himself and pumped his brakes abruptly, on purpose.

“Sorry there was uh.. uh possum in the road back there.”




“Well, no,” the whole point was to go and do the stuff to find out if he could put some lofty proof behind any of the rumours or stories, and if he didn’t go where he was told he shouldn’t go, he’d get nothing at all. Although he was far more wary about the cemetery now, it hadn’t really slowed him down. He was pretty sure that being bitten in college should’ve scared him out of the whole thing rather than spurring him into it, but that was another reason why he’d likely never pass a psych eval ever. ‘Do you value your own life’ hard pass. “But if I don’t ask you can’t say no and then I can’t ignore that no.” Which could get him in some trouble or something.

The sudden brake had him grabbing the seatbelt before it could throttle him, bracing slightly with his knees hitting the dash.

Possum. Right.

“You know I could probably clean this at home, just some… like… soapy water and shit, right?” He was still hoping they could avoid the tetanus shot. His hopes were very low though.




Exactly. Of course he wouldn’t listen.

“And yet we still end up here in this same situation,” the werewolf countered, motioning to the both of them and the vehicle as best he could given he was driving. At least if there was a call ahead of time, he could gauge how dangerous the place was, and then how likely Austin was to either cause harm to it, or himself.

He couldn’t help but smirk. The sudden braking had served its purpose by taking Austin’s attention off his wound, which was starting to smell a bit off to the werewolf. Though that could have been the dirt inside of it and his body’s natural reaction. “No,” he answered, rolling down his window a little.

“So the rule is, if you keep arguing, you ride the rest of the way in the trunk,” Rex explained - even though they were maybe a block away from the small community hospital.




“That’s hardly my fault, that’s more on you, y’know, for having a conscientious town that’s curious about strange things going on and actually call in case it’s serious. I mean, any other place they’d just let whatever was happening happen. Not that I’m complaining… I’d rather not have my face eaten by a giant spider.” It wasn’t every town where the locals actually did something when they saw weird lights on in a place they shouldn’t be, or if someone was in an area that was dangerous. He’d waded through a swamp for hours one time only to find out that they knew he was out there but just figured he was fishing. In the dark, in the middle of winter. Honestly.

“You should really do a worse job if you want people not to call and tell you the weird kid is in another abandoned building.”

The window almost seemed like a precursor to Austin getting chucked out the window, so he just pulled the strap on his seatbelt a little tighter to keep him in place. So, they were going to the hospital, yay. “I think that’d be really unsafe and defeat the purpose of taking me to the ER.”




Any other place they’d just let whatever was happening happen. At that, Rex turned his head to look at Austin for an unnaturally long time - his eyes completely off the road though they were on a straight stretch to begin with.

“How about I don’t want anyone in my town getting their face eaten by a giant spider, which I why even trespassing calls are handled so then I don’t have to deal with the mountain of paperwork that’s needed when a body is found a week later,” he argued, though quietly and with only a slightly judgey snark in return.

And only then did he look back to the road.

“Or maybe it’d be all too convenient and not matter how much you get banged up in the process?” he shrugged with a convincing indifference.




Austin made a point of not looking over, even as he got a little bit tense from the whole staring thing. Like, sure, the guy was a Sheriff and he was pretty involved in the whole town safety thing, but that was a bit of an exception rather than the rule in Austin’s experience.

He never really saw much of the police until Seven Devils at least.

“I mean… who does want to get eaten by a spider?” He probably shouldn’t get into the number of times he almost was a body and just figured at least he’d know about the afterlife if that happened.

“I have comments to make about police brutality and the law, but given the previous circumstances of tonight, I’m just going to hum thoughtfully and remain quiet.” And Austin then hummed and nodded his head, looking towards Rex with an expression of calm understanding.




Part of him wanted to answer Austin with a huge resounding ‘You’ - but he refrained. Barely. In truth the only thing that kept him from commenting was that he didn’t want the inevitable word vomit about how giant spiders ‘weren’t the only things out there’. Which would have led to Rex being forced to listen to the conspiracy theories and tales of mostly-fictional creatures.

He just didn’t have the patience to commit to that right now.

Rex offered the young man a wide, charming smirk. “Smartest decision you’ve made all night,” he insisted as they approached the hospital shortly after. Honestly, he couldn’t wait to pawn Austin off on one of the nurses for a few minutes. He still had to drive the kid home after it, after all.

Although, maybe he could sweet talk the nurses into giving the kid a sedative or two to knock him out.

Jul. 2nd, 2020


[info]hanlakatos
[info]sevendevilslog

[info]hanlakatos
[info]sevendevilslog

[No Subject]


[info]hanlakatos
[info]sevendevilslog

HANNAH LAKATOS + AUSTIN JONSON
talk of their next move, payback for a prank
JUNE 27th - afternoon | The Lookout | PG-13
Read more... )

Bartending at The Lookout was… kind of working?

It probably wasn’t the best place to work, as a werewolf, but she couldn’t do Temptation for more than one night a week and she needed something to keep her busy. There was a good chance she’d run into Daniel, but she’d already run through the scenario (and her exit) multiple times. The door was strategically placed enough that she had a few seconds to disappear into the small kitchen area if she smelled him. That and she was banking on her younger sister keeping their older brother home a majority of the time. Christian had been right, though, and she needed to tear the bandaid off sooner rather than later.

Popping off the cap of a beer bottle on the edge of the counter, she glanced up as a sort of squirrel-y looking kid walked in. Kid being anyone younger than her. As the washed up hunter in front of her cast a glance and scoff in the kid’s direction, Hannah shortchanged him. It wasn’t a dick move when the guy had basically been making inappropriate comments to her about her ass since he walked in and sat down.

“Fuckin’ nancy boy must be lost,” the hunter grumbled before belching.

Hannah quickly reached for her own open beer behind the bar to take a swig for the sake of not saying anything nasty in return. Tucking the bottle away underneath, the werewolf moved down the bar and offered a warm smile. “What can I get ya, bud?”

“Ha! A Shirley Temple!”




In researching Seven Devils, there were a few things that came up. Lots of rumours that led back to the witch trials, lots of old animal attacks that made no sense, lots of questions with few answers. And that was fine, Austin liked a mystery, really. But there were only so many trails someone could follow which led nowhere before he got fed up.

The Lookout wasn’t on Yelp!, it didn’t really have much of a media footprint, but when he’d asked around it seemed like there were specific people who went there. Apparently, it had a ‘scene’, so to speak. At first, Austin thought maybe it was a dive bar, but none of the college kids seemed interested in it. Then he wondered if it was a biker bar, but that didn’t seem to be the right atmosphere either. He knew it wasn’t a tweaker place, if anything Sheriff Hilts did not seem the type to allow a bar like that in his town openly.

So, the only thing to really do was to go there and find out.

Which was probably the second worst decision he’d made in Seven Devils -the first being to wander around a cemetery at night and get shot at (sort of), and it was definitely not something he’d prepared for at all.

Ignoring the guy down the bar, Austin glanced at the bar for a moment before settling, “Beer? Whatever’s good.” Because he didn’t want to go through numerous beers just to be told they didn’t have those.




The comment from the hunter made her purse her lips in annoyance — subduing the urge to punch him in the face and strangle him with a dish towel. Thankfully, he wasn’t a local hunter, and would hopefully be gone from town in a few days.

“Sure thing.” Hannah smiled a little wider and went to the large cooler to fetch a bottle of a local brew that she liked. She hadn’t done much exploring in the town, having spent her focus on familiarizing herself with the woods mostly so she didn’t end up getting lost in the mountains, away from her clothes, during her first full moon. But she’d at least sampled the local IPA’s well enough.

Hannah made her best effort not to get distracted by the young man’s smell simply because it was new; her nose insanely more sensitive since being bitten. “Ignore the meatsuit, you’re more than welcome here,” she insisted, popping the cap and passing the bottle over. “At least when I’m working, I can make no guarantees about the others,” she added.




Feeling unwelcome in places wasn’t exactly new to Austin. It’d been something he’d kind of felt most of his life, so this wasn’t new, and he didn’t really care for the dismissiveness of the elder man, but hell, it wasn’t like it was aggressive.

“Thanks,” he managed to give the bartender a small smile, because it wasn’t like the whole atmosphere of the place screamed ‘strangers welcome’ either. “I’m kinda new to the area, had no idea what this place even was.” But she hadn’t made a big deal about serving him -and it wasn’t like he didn’t look over 21 anyway, so it was a bonus in that aspect.

“Probably not a great idea to just wander into places though, I guess.” But then again, it was literally his past time.




“Hannah,” she told him when he thanked her.

His explanation and admittance to being new in town made more sense, and any suspicions she might’ve had about his intentions quickly disappeared. She grinned faintly and nodded a little in agreement. “I mean, it’s smart that you wandered in when it’s still light out because you just have to worry about the sad day drinking types like that one,” the werewolf explained, thumbing in the direction of the elderly hunter. In reality he was no different than a Vietnam Vet sitting at the bar, rough around the edges and critical of every young guy who walked in. Though, the young man sitting before her didn’t exactly scream ‘hunter.’

Still, evenings typically drew a significantly rougher crowd - especially toward the end of the night.

“I’m relatively new to town, too,” she admitted. “Been here about a month or so, just enjoying the quiet and the mountains before sucking it up and getting a job.” Not that Hannah needed to — the Men of Letters were letting her stay at their safe house free of charge. But, truly, Hannah really needed to find something to keep her busy, or she would have gone crazy or annoyed Christian so badly that he changed his mind on her being a werewolf.

“So where are you from originally, then?”




“Austin,” he offered it since she offered his, and it only seemed polite. She was probably right about the day drinkers too, because if this place was packed with guys like the gnarly one glaring over his drink, well Austin would’ve just had to turn around and walk out less he be murdered just because.

“Yeah, I heard the mountains were something to see.” Among other things. “I’m from Texas, little place called Dripping Springs,” he didn’t expect anyone to really have heard of it, honestly, and he’d moved a few times that it wasn’t exactly home. “It’s actually a little like this place, minus the Blue Ridge Mountains.” It would’ve at least been something to do.

“But I write for a travel blog, and apparently National Parks and mountain ranges are the next big thing, so I got to visit here and check it out.” So far it didn’t suck, it helped dramatically that Seven Devils also seemed to boast a lot of involvement with his side project too.




Austin. He looked like an Austin - she smiled softly at how fitting it was. “I’ve never been,” Han told him, reaching for her beer and taking a swig. It was interesting that he claimed his hometown was similar, and it made her wonder if he was aware of all the underlying supernatural things, as well.

“Better be careful,” she warned ominously with a small grin. “Them woods are dangerous,” she said in her best local accent, though failed miserably. And her warning didn’t really hold any true merit - at least in her experience of the woods so far. Then again she wasn’t entirely sure how she’d react if she came up against something other than a wolf.

“Ever get lost in your adventuring?” the werewolf asked curiously. It was something she worried about. Even before being bitten, Hannah enjoy a nice hike - but always on trails. Having to shift into a wolf under a full moon, well it wasn’t the sort of thing you wanted caught by tourists or on trail cameras. Which meant deep woods were essential.

She trusted her nose, but not that much. Not yet.




Austin almost choked on his drink at her warning, not because of the warning itself so much as the voice she decided to use. “So long as there isn’t gold in them there hills, I think we’ll be okay.” At least he hadn’t choked so bad he’d spat beer in her face. That would just mean he needed to crawl under a rock and never leave.

“A few times,” honestly, getting lost was sometimes beneficial, he found some strange places, and sometimes it was just terrible. But the best places were ones that people weren’t easily traipsing through. “I got lost in Texas one time and my phone died, after that I figured learning how to read an actual compass was important. Supposedly if you travel north all the time you’ll eventually find something familiar.”

He wasn’t sure how true that was, and while there was GPS in everything, there was the chance that batteries would die and he’d have no idea where he was. Reading a compass was just smart.




Hannah laughed at his reaction - and what could have been an embarrassing clean up and reason for a shirt change. In a lot of ways he reminded her of her younger brother Mike which did absolutely nothing in helping her homesickness for her siblings.

Her eyebrows shot up in surprise when he admitted to getting lost more than once. She honestly hadn’t anticipated the answer. Though it was a testament to how scrappy he truly was — which was nothing but a compliment in this instance. “That.. seems like a bad place to get lost?” She was just throwing it out there, having never been to Texas after all.

“So basically you just admitted you either weren’t a boy scout growing up or you didn’t pay enough attention and thus didn’t get a lot of merit badges?” Hannah questioned teasingly.




For Austin, pretending never seemed like the best way to go. He wasn’t the most coordinated of people, and he knew that, but he made up for it with enthusiasm and curiosity, or so he thought, really. People probably thought it was reckless and stupid and after he’d gotten bitten he should’ve stopped with the weird antics and gotten a proper job and stayed out of dangerous and dark places.

But no one accused Austin of being the brightest bulb either.

“It’s not the best place, I mean, there’s no mountain lions or bears, but there’s enough wildlife to make it pretty stupid.” Like the snakes and alligators, and other rather vicious little monsters. “I once got chased by an aardvark that was determined to show me who was boss.” The aardvark absolutely was, and Austin had run for his life, convinced it was a carnivorous cryptid.

The Blue Ridge Mountains were, by far, more vast and likely more dangerous, but it had yet to really put Austin off. “I was never a boy scout, I moved a lot, it seemed stupid to join clubs and then leave them.” And the less people he interacted with the less likely someone would notice anything. Austin learned that one later. “How about you? You a mountaineering girl, I mean woman?”




The werewolf blinked and stared for a moment - the imagery of the young man before her, running and (probably) screaming from.. an aardvark, was truly comical. “An aardvark?” she asked, just to be sure. “The thing that looks like a slightly slow kangaroo?”

Hannah attempted to hide the grin behind the rim of her beer bottle as she took another drink.

He had a point - there was no use starting something if you were just going to pick up and leave shortly after anyway. Hannah wondered if his parents maybe were hunters, or just military as that was a normal thing. She wasn’t getting any younger, so she tipped her beer in his direction and took the compliment while she could. “No, but I could beat any one of those idiots silly with a hockey stick,” Hannah insisted, nodding in the direction of the small brood of hunters.

“You might be too young, but if I had to pick a Spice Girl to identify with it’d be Sport with a dash of Scary,” Hannah admitted teasingly, aware he was of drinking age but honestly he didn’t seem much older than that.




Austin was somehow nodding and shaking his head at the same time, “So like, they’re kinda like kangaroos, but also a bit like pigs? And maybe a little like an anteater?” It was hard to explain, “But it was in the dark, and I’d already kinda creeped myself out by that point, so I was sure it was some kind of--” He was about to say cryptid, before he remembered people didn’t always know what that was, “desert slash swamp monster thing.”

Much better.

“Guess that’s a pretty good skill to have when you work around here?” It might not be too rough a place, but bartenders who could handle the locals when they got out of hand? That seemed like a pretty key aspect. “Ah,” the Spice Girls reference didn’t go over his head though, “I’m right on the cusp of knowing what you’re talking about. Mostly because of the reunion thing, and a little because of my little sister.”

He was admitting to nothing else. “A Scary Sporty Spice would’ve been something though, I mean, that’d be the real female empowerment movement right there.”




His explanation helped his case a little more but his pause? Well he faltered on the ending a little bit. “I hate it when I run into desert slash swamp monster things,” Hannah told him with an amused grin.

On the cusp; oh he was a good five years younger. Probably more. “I suppose you could say tha—”

The drunk haggler of a hunter sprouted off another slur in Austin’s direction, interrupting her, and she finally snapped. Hannah turned her head to look at the older man, exaggerating an overly sweet smile. “You’re made outta spare parts, aren’t ya, bud?”

She turned her attention back to Austin and shrugged a shoulder and simply said, “Scary-Sporty.”

Hannah then pointed at Austin sternly, returning back to their conversation. “Hey. You better not ever bring your sister into a place like this or I’ll kick your ass, got it?” She didn’t even know a single detail about the kid’s sister, but Hannah knew enough about hunters and well.. the younger woman definitely didn’t need that in her life.




“Listen, it’s hard to know what’s out there,” and he was edging towards being a weird nut that shouldn’t wander places, so he just trailed off at that.

Austin couldn’t help but glance over at the other guy at the bar, although he thankfully wasn’t expected to say anything, since he definitely wouldn’t have, even if Hannah hadn’t interjected at all. Austin wasn’t great with conflict, and even less so with adult men, so yeah, he’d just stay quiet and deal with it anyway.

“Scary-Sporty is definitely the best.” Yeah, he was sure they likely wanted to hire intimidating but friendly women to work here, if only to hold their own against guys like that.

“No ma’am,” it automatically slipped out, the mild Texan drawl that he’d worked a fair amount to drop through time, but Austin just held his hands up and shook his head, “Never would, scouts honour.” Even though they both knew he hadn’t been a scout now. Chuckling a little, Austin shook his head, “She’s still in Texas anyway, going to school to be a lawyer. She got the brains in the family.” Which wasn’t hard, since Austin had a head of broken biscuits half the time.




Hannah laughed softly as he trailed off. It was indeed scary how much he reminded her of Mike. Which was probably why she felt the need to deflect the unnecessary drunk bullying from the hunter at the end of the bar.

The werewolf nearly corrected him on the ma’am-calling, but she chalked it up to being a Texan thing and let it slide for now. Cracking a lopsided grin when he gave her scouts honour she nodded with a quiet “uh-huh.”

She made quick work of getting herself another beer, still listening intently. “A lawyer? Dang.” Her thoughts instantly changed to Rose and how exceptionally bright she was. And, according to the stalking Hannah was doing of her younger sibling’s social media, her future college career would be starting soon. It was hard not to feel proud. “So did that leave you with just the adventuring and questionable navigation skills?” Hannah added jokingly.




“Yeah, Prue is pretty impressive,” Austin rarely talked about his little sister, it wasn’t because he wasn’t in contact or proud of her or anything, just that few people really asked or bothered for it to come up in conversation, “Clearly, I got the looks too.”

Not entirely true. The scar didn’t make him unattractive, but he knew it was a flaw, one that Prue didn’t have. But they had the same sharp facial features, the same blue eyes, so typically speaking, Prue had the looks working for her too.

“I definitely have all the adventuring and lack of navigation skills though. Probably a lot of the poor choices too.” Case in point walking into this bar like it was a good idea. “Isn’t that how genetics works though?” It was not, but still. He half wondered if it was too forward to ask Hannah if she had siblings.




Hannah tilted her head as if considering him for a moment before she smirked. “You are kinda pretty,” she told him. “You know, I wouldn’t get lost in the woods around here because of that reason,” the werewolf added as seriously as she could before chuckling.

“I’m not quite sure how many qualities can really be divided between seven siblings,” she admitted with a laugh. Though they all weren’t living, sadly. A detail he didn’t need to know. “Rose and I are the only girls so we clearly got all the looks, and the brains,” she told him matter-of-factly. “Dan… definitely got all the testosterone. Benjamin likes to think he’s funny, at least. And Mike got.. spoiled.” Hannah cracked a fond smile.

“And the rest got—” she paused abruptly. Killed? Murdered? What they’d asked for with pursuing a life of hunting? Hannah wasn’t quite sure anymore. She waved her hand in the air as if it didn’t matter.

The door opened and one of the regulars walked in. “Heyyy, Lakatos!” he greeted before taking a seat at the bar between Austin and his arch nemesis. Hannah seized the opportunity to pour a scotch for the new hunter and passed it along before returning to Austin. “Haven’t seen my family in a while so.. any way,” she said, more than hinting for a subject change.




Coming from her, it was probably better than anyone else that might hang out in this bar, so Austin wasn’t too concerned. “I mean, if I’m worrying about that stuff I shouldn’t go anywhere after dark.” All kinds of stories and things to worry about out there in the big wide world.

Seven siblings, that was a lot, Austin couldn’t really think of having more mouths in the house than what they did. But it might’ve been completely different if he’d grown up with a big brother or sister, or maybe if he’d just have more younger siblings that he’d constantly have been worried about and protecting. But still. “I’m sure you’re the brainiest, you and your sister. Girls are always the brainiest.”

Although he did at least pick up on the cue that she didn’t really want to talk too much about her family, maybe being far away was too much. “Yeah, I’m not really looking forward to when I need to go home, the guilt about being missing for so much is laid on pretty thick. I might get lost in a forest around about that time.”




She shrugged a shoulder and pursed her lips as if to agree with him not going anywhere after dark because he was pretty. Snickering softly, Hannah took a drink of her new beer. “Rose more so than me,” Hannah smiled fondly.

But when he joked about avoiding home because of the inevitable guilt from being gone too long - the werewolf was hit with a rather large reality check.

“Don’t,” Hannah told him quickly. “Don’t put it off any longer than you need to.” Great advice, coming from her, as she was doing just that out of her own fear and worry. “Especially if you and your sister are close,” Hannah said, shaking her head, “I’m sure she misses you something fierce and it’s not fair to—”

Hannah gathered herself, leaning on the bar lightly to tell him more quietly. “One day you might actually get lost in a forest and she won’t have any closure, so… Don’t waste moments while you still have them.”




Austin was a little surprised by the seriousness in Hannah’s tone, the quick argument that he shouldn’t put it off, and he knew she was probably just thinking about how crappy it was to avoid home, but home was sort of crappy.

It’s not fair to…

Maybe it wasn’t, since Austin put a lot of his own issues on other people, but he couldn’t avoid it forever. Even if he wanted to. Picking at the label on his bottle, he contemplated a throw away comment, dismissing how him getting lost in the forest wouldn’t actually be that big a deal. “Yeah,” it would be something of a big deal, he knew that, but he and Prue weren’t close like that. And he couldn’t fault it, but it did diminish a lot of his life. “We’re… we’re not that close, really, but I kinda get what you mean.”

Worrying the corner of his top lip between his teeth, catching a little on the scar before he let it go, Austin quickly took another drink to try and dislodge the feeling in his stomach. “Even if Texas weather sucks around now.”




Hannah realized how intense she’d just gotten, and the heavy mental load she’d just unleashed on the poor guy. And how he picked at his label and admitted that he wasn’t that close to his sister? Well it left Hannah feeling bad for putting him into a corner basically. “Sorry, nobody ordered a side of serious bartender,” she told him genuinely, attempting to mull it all over.

His little anxious tick with his lip caused her gaze to naturally flicker up to the scar - subconsciously making her reach for her forearm which was covered with a wide sweatband that she used to wipe her hand off when needed. It worked, for the time being, and hid her bite scars. “I’ll bet,” she added with a softer smile, her hand finally leaving the armband.

“I’m not a fan of this humidity or the terrible insects who seem to thrive within it,” Hannah admitted with a huff and grimace. She could imagine Texas wasn’t much better.




“It must be a free side order then, I don’t really mind it.” He didn’t mind so much, sometimes people didn’t exactly care about where you came from. And other people meant well. He could tell that Hannah wasn’t just nosing in, so it wasn’t too bothersome that she wanted to give him advice, maybe based on her own distance from siblings.

“At least it’s not Washington? Pacific Northwest is the worst, it’s constantly just rain and damp and grey.” He didn’t mind it really, he’d found a few instances that maybe more than wolves took up the wooded areas in Seattle, but he’d not pushed much further on that given how fucking damp it was.

“I guess missing the Texas heat is one thing, then again, when you’re in the Texas heat, you do not miss it at all.” Sticky and hot was worse than sticky and cold.




She was grateful he wasn’t offended, or at least put up a good act to insist he wasn’t. Still, the subject was gracefully dropped by the both of them in exchange for the weather.

Since being bitten, Hannah found herself less tolerant of the heat. Of course, spending the majority of her life in Canada didn’t help either. But her body actually running a few degrees warmer than it normally did had a lot to do with her discomfort for the South and her constant praise of air conditioning.

The thought of Washington, just from his description, made her feel sticky - and glad she hadn’t followed the Men of Letters there, instead choosing Seven Devils and her family. She took another sip of her cold beer before shaking her head in a ‘do not want’ kind of way. “I’m from Quebec. I like snow, it’s my natural habitat,” she told him. That and she swore she learnt how to ice skate before she could actually walk, but neither or her parents were around to ever really argue that fact. “First week here I thought I was melting every time I walked outside,” she insisted jokingly.




It was probably cliche, letting things devolve into talking about the weather, but Austin could understand how it was a safe topic, there weren’t exactly triggers in discussing where it was rainy and where it wasn’t afterall. “Man, you really shouldn’t go to Texas ever.”

Snow wasn’t something Texas really saw, maybe on the one off instance of a cold front coming in, freak weather moments. But it wasn’t something you’d expect.

“I had to go to New York to see snow for the first time.” And that had been an experience, he hadn’t realized the world got that cold honestly. “I don’t think it’s for me, you know? I’m okay with being too hot, I don’t think I wanna be cold.”

He wasn’t sure what Seven Devils would be like in the winter, he wasn’t even sure if he’d be there in the winter.




“I’m going to do my best not to,” she laughed. And it was true; really anything more South and she would probably be absolutely miserable 24/7. Though honestly, she’d go anywhere her siblings were in a heartbeat, regardless of the weather or how uncomfortable it’d make her.

“New York isn’t too bad, though I could do without much of the citidiots,” Hannah said with a shrug. City life was convenient but, not so much her thing anymore. It simply couldn’t be anymore even if she did like it. Holding up her beer bottle she grinned. “To polar opposites,” she toasted him before swigging back as much alcohol as she could.

Hannah smirked and tapped the bar lightly in front of him with a wink; “Don’t ever go to Canada.”

Jun. 24th, 2020


[info]narcosis
[info]sevendevilslog

[info]narcosis
[info]sevendevilslog

[No Subject]


[info]narcosis
[info]sevendevilslog
who's that haunting me
AUSTIN JONSON + MORGAN HALE
Austin goes bump in the night; literally
June 23rd | Hale Funeral Home | PG-13
Read more... )
For all that Austin was driven by learning about the unusual, discovering the secrets of society and the hidden truth about what was out there, he also tried to be respectful while doing it. He’d been told a few times that the funeral home was a potential hotspot for paranormal activity.

It made sense. The passage of souls through one place, there was likely going to be energy there, enough to draw spirits to one place, if they didn’t die there or weren’t resting very close by. He knew the local cemetery was near the funeral home, which was also sensible in a small town like this.

So he’d checked up, made sure there were no funerals in the next few days, that he wouldn’t be disturbing someone’s grieving and well, then it was just a matter of walking the grounds.

He had no intention of going inside -it was a home for a family just as much as it was a business. But outside, lurking in someone’s garden with a recorder to see if he could pick up some EVP? That was just this side of weird that he’d get away with it. At the least, Sheriff Hilts would arrest him and not shoot him on sight.

Hopefully.


“Psst, hey bitch. There’s some perv in your garden filming your house.”

Morgan groaned and swatted at the big, fat wad of spectral nothing that was “whispering” in her ear. She rolled over on the couch, facing the back, and nuzzled her face into the cushions. “Shut up, please, I’m trying to get my beauty sleep.”

“You’re gonna have to sleep for weeks, then.”

The necromancer huffed. Of all the spirits that liked to linger about, and certainly there were some annoying ones, how had she gotten stuck with this one? “Fuckin’ move on already, loser. I’m trying to sleep.”

The ghost clicked her tongue in disapproval. “What if someone passes in front of a window in their knickers? Do you really want them to end up in some perv’s online revenge porn nonsense?”

It didn’t help that the spirit was a millennial, through and through. Every now and then, for kicks, the spirit -- Alexis -- would just start screaming “IT’S BRITNEY, BITCH” in the middle of the night because she thought it was funny. A strange haunting, to be sure.

“Fine.” Morgan tossed off the blanket and rolled off the sofa. In a pair of shorts and a long-sleeved shirt, she slipped out the side door of the Hale Funeral Home and stealthily crept towards the back to the garden. And, sure enough, there was a guy, holding an EVP machine.

“You’re such a dramatic bitch. He’s not filming for nude shots or something.” And, true to form, Morgan uttered this without the faintest hint of a whisper, just full volume, as she glared at the spectre at her side.


Given how much trouble he’d already been in around town, Austin at least paid attention to his surroundings -mostly. Hearing movement could be someone in the house, or it could be evidence of an entity on the property, which was what Austin was looking for.

Except it wasn’t like he heard garbled voices afterwards, or some kind of static. It was a clear voice, talking to someone. A little panicked, and sure that Hilts would probably make him stay in the station all night if he had to come back up, Austin made the attempt to find cover, tripped over his feet and landed in the grass which…

Okay that wasn’t ideal but fine, he’d hopefully avoid being seen if he stayed low, right?

He could lie in the damn grass for a bit. It’s fine.


Watching the silhouetted figure trip over his own feet and fall directly into the grass and stay there might have been the funniest thing she’d seen in days. With absolutely no concern for the people sleeping inside, Morgan, and her not-so-friendly spectre, erupted into laughter.

“Does he think that he’s being inconspicuous?” Alexis waddled over towards him -- not that he could see her -- and pointed at the heap in the grass. “Hah! I love it. It’s so cute, he thinks he’s hiding. Can we keep him?”

Morgan rolled her eyes. “Cram it, Casper.”

Folding her arms over her chest, Morgan cleared her throat. “Ahem-hem,” she took a few tentative steps forward, not caring much that she was still technically in her PJs and there was some stranger trying to hide in her yard after pointing an EVP machine at her home. “I mean, I already saw you, buddy. At this point you’re just running up the sum total on your humiliation receipt.”

Alexis snorted and began drifting aimlessly around the yard. Not much of an attention span on that one.

And, depending on her proximity, the machine in the man’s hand whizzed and whirred, or quieted. Damn, she hated those things.


Frankly, Austin was half hoping that the ground would open and swallow him whole. It’d be the perfect end to the night. It didn’t seem to be happening though, and his hoodie was getting damp, he was sure he’d kicked his own ankle from the twinge of pain there too. “Nope,” but he’d been spotted and the person was still lingering, so if he was going to deal with Sheriff Hilts again, Austin was just going to lie there and feel pathetic. “I’m good where I am, thanks. Sheriff won’t shoot me if I stay still.”

Even if he was wondering about the on and off noises from his EVP device and how he was so curious who she’d been talking to. A glance up had confirmed that it was just one person standing there, so maybe the other one was inside calling the station. “Don’t suppose you’d wanna turn away and let me slink off in embarrassment, right?”

There’d probably be a fair amount to explain, and Austin was aware that he was skirting the point of being a fucking creep because this was a damn house. But the fact that he was getting readings from his gear at least showed that something was lingering there.


Morgan chuckled and jutted a hip as she placed her hands on them. “Haven’t called the Sheriff yet, so the only person you’re in danger from is little ole me,” she replied with a hint of laughter in her voice. “And just, like, rampant humiliation. I dunno, I get the impression that doesn’t bother you too much though?”

Goddess, she couldn’t wait to tell Florence about this in the morning.

The witch openly laughed when he suggested that she could, possibly, just turn around and let him slink away with his tail tucked between his legs. Even Alexis started snorting with laughter as she sauntered back over to the stoop and squatted onto the stairs. “What a royal doofus!”

Morgan clicked her tongue. “Now, now,” she chastised the spectre.

Turning her attention back to the man in the grass, she smirked and shook her head. “Nah, sorry,” she replied. “This is too funny, and at this point I feel like I need to force you to look in the eye of the woman whose family home you’re creeping in front of. We are definitely not done embarrassing you yet.”


Okay, so, at least there was a chance he might get out of this without dealing with Sheriff Hilts again, even if he was going to leave his shredded dignity all over the lawn. “Humiliation and I are very good friends.” He rolled over at least, even if it meant soaking his back as well as his front, but he wanted to stop talking into the grass, “But it doesn’t exactly make the experience any better.”

She kept saying we, but whoever else was around was apparently still inside, “Your friend isn’t calling the station then?” He chanced a glance backwards, getting a look at the woman, and then promptly looking at the sky again. Okay so, she’d come out from bed presumably, he’d really climbed that creeper ladder so quickly. “Um I ah, yeah.”

Pulling himself up from the ground, because this was a terrible angle if she was expecting eye contact. “I’m really sorry, like, seriously. I mean, there’s no way I can play this off as not knowing where I was, but like, I didn’t mean to like disturb anyone. I swear I was staying away from the windows and shit, honest.”


“What, you mean slinking outside of strangers’ houses with EVP machines doesn’t usually charm the residents? No cool points earned? Weird…,”

Your friend isn’t calling the station then?

Morgan snorted. Glancing over her shoulder, she watched as Alexis made a face and framed her pointer finger and thumb around the side of her head and began mimicking a phone call. Rolling her eyes, the witch turned back to the Hale Funeral Home visitor just as he was standing up.

And, of course, as luck would have it, he had to be kinda cute. Even when he was sopping wet and sheepish and slightly pathetic.

“Bitch, do not get doe eyes for this creep!” Alexis shrieked. Some ghosts took way too much advantage of the fact that barely anyone could hear them.

Morgan chuckled. “Mmmhm, sure,” she rolled her neck. “That’s what all the men who come creeping around outside a funeral home say.” She couldn’t help but genuinely grin, a bit of a shit-eating expression, as she took a step closer. While the whole death-aura thing could be a bit of a bummer in most social situations, tonight it was likely to be more helpful. “What, exactly, were you hoping to find out here, if I may ask?”


“It’s not usually houses.” For the most part it wasn’t, Austin tended to stick to abandoned places; prisons, sanitariums, the occasional boarding school. He only really went to residential areas if someone invited him. And yes, he knew that the Funeral Home was a residence as well as a business and he should’ve thought ahead, but still, the possibility had been too much to pass up.

Better to ask forgiveness than permission, right?

“Honestly?” He figured she hadn’t called the station yet, and she said whoever was inside wasn’t going to do that either, so if he could get a bit of a chance to not have this marked against him, that’d be pretty great on his end. He was still working off the time he’d been in the cemetery when whoever had been there with a gun. “Ghosts? I got some information that this place is haunted, and I know it’s weird, but…” He shrugged a little, holding up the EVP device. “It was kinda promising.”

Then again, he was being weird and creepy and stalking around this person's house in the middle of the night when they were sleeping, or trying to. “I really didn’t mean to disturb you, y’know while you were… yeah.” He pointed, again, to her state of dress and man, he had to keep his eyes upwards instead of on her legs.


I got some information that this place is haunted.

Morgan had to bite back the urge to erupt into utter and total laughter -- the type that could double you over and leave you in tears and worrying about whether or not you were going to pee your pants, just a little. The hope in his eyes as he held up the EVP device, that the possibility of haunting was promising, while Alexis hung out behind her on the porch making stereotypical-ghost-haunting moans was just too damn funny.

“You got information that this place is haunted?” Morgan repeated, tilting her head. “What’s your source, exactly?”

Anyone could make the assumption that a funeral home, especially with a pair of veritable weirdos like Morgan and Florence living there, was haunted -- but who told him it was worth checking out?

She smirked and shrugged when she saw the slight effort he was putting into maintaining eye contact rather than glancing down at her state of relative undress.

“MORGAN HALE I SWEAR TO GOD,” Alexis screeched, “BE BETTER THAN THIS!”

The witch glared over her shoulder at the spirit and then back to her visitor. “It’s cool, I wouldn’t have known you were out here if an annoying little bird hadn’t told me,” she gestured at what, to him, would be the empty space behind her. “I’m Morgan, by the way. Alexis is the reason your EVP is going haywire. She’s been waddling around out here like a high-strung parent chaperoning a school dance.”

She smirked a little wider, began turning back towards her house, and glanced at the man over her shoulder. “Y’know, in case you were wondering just how promising this whole haunting-business really was.”


“Different paranormal sites, there’s a couple that mention this place, and I talked to a guy who said his aunt had her funeral here and,” Austin shrugged again, playing with his EVP device just for something to do with his hands that wasn’t over the top gesticulating. “He mentioned an experience so…”

So here he was, in her yard, being a fucking creeper. He should just hand himself in to Sheriff Hilts at this point for his own mental safety, jesus.

And she was being nice! Introducing herself and… “Alexis is…” Okay, so he wasn’t great at catching clues, and even as he looked around like he’d see some kind of apparition, like Casper or something, Austin frowned again. “I… Okay so, you…”

His head was actually going to explode. He’d never had like an actual, honest to god person, telling him about an actual, honest to god ghost. Unless she was just pulling his leg because he was the lunatic in her yard and she wanted a laugh out of it.

“I’m Austin.” He’d started to edge towards her before realising she was probably leaving because he was in her fucking yard, his step halting with an abortive motion. “I’m really hoping you aren’t just dicking me around with that ghost chaperone thing?”


“Ew, different paranormal sites are talking about this place?” Alexis scoffed indignantly. “Get on your phone and let’s find some of these sites -- I wanna see if they mention me personally!”

Morgan rolled her eyes so hard they nearly rolled into the back of her skull. “Yes, I’m sure they have a bunch of threads on ghost reddits about the Wonder that is Alexis, could you just bounce for a sec? You’re giving me a headache, here.”

Alexis gave her the finger but finally, thankfully, drifted back inside the funeral home.

Now she just had to contend with this poor guy -- Austin, her friendly Ghost Adventurer -- looking like she’d just blown his mind.

Then again, she’d just confirmed the afterlife and that ghosts were real, and had done it completely casually, so maybe it was warranted.

Morgan stopped heading back towards the door and folded her arms over her chest. “I wish I was just dicking you around, sweetheart,” she replied with a snort. “You should be thankful you don’t have to listen to that kind of shit on a regular basis -- we have one here who never shuts up about true crime and Alexis sometimes screeches LEAVE BRITNEY ALONE in the middle of the night just to be an asshole.”

She gave him one last glance-over, looking him up and down.

“I CAN SEE YOU GIVING HIM THE EYE MORGAN, YOU WHORE, STOP IT!” Alexis had stuck her head out of a window and screamed. It probably woke up Florence, the only other person lucky enough to enjoy Alexis’ company. As if to accentuate her point, the spectre managed to conjure enough energy to cause one of Morgan’s uncle’s flower pots to pop off the ledge and break on the ground below the window.

“Funky old house,.” Morgan told him with a wink. “You ever want to hear some stories, I’d be happy to talk to you about ‘em. You’ll just have to come to the front door and, y’know, not after midnight.” With a wink, the witch traipsed back up the stairs and into her home.


It was getting weirder by the second, really. Although he supposed that the understanding of ghosts was really limited, and if Morgan was aware of what they were saying and doing, she’d know better. He’d always assumed they were just like you saw in the movies or on shows, where they just moved things or knocked on stuff. But they’d been people, living and breathing and with interests and hobbies, and it made sense that when they died, something of that would be left.

A pop-culture obsessed ghost was probably a lot to handle.

When the pot fell down, and Austin was just looking up at nothing, he nodded slowly. “So, maybe tomorrow? Or like the day after? Around lunch time?” He could do that, knock on the front door, just ask to talk to Morgan if it wasn’t her who answered, if she wasn’t calling the cops and actively inviting him back. He could get some honest to god information about the afterlife?

“Maybe like, with coffee and some cookies or something from the shop?” He was trying not to shout, since there were living people in the house, but he really couldn’t help that he was genuinely getting something from this that wasn’t arrested and frankly that was something else to wrap his head around.


Mar. 25th, 2020


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