Rafe used to be a scalleywag (redensign) wrote in st_margarets, @ 2017-04-28 12:10:00 |
|
|||
Entry tags: | character: jack cavanaugh, character: rafe farrowe, location: principal's office |
We Need to Talk about James
WHO: Jack Cavanaugh & Rafe Farrowe
WHEN: Not long after James' return to school
WHERE: Headmistress's Office
Ms. Menides was still absent and Rafe had grown used to seeing Jack behind the door. He still looked forward and hoped for the eventual return of their beloved Ms. Menides. Jack, however, did the best he could and while making an occasional misstep, had done a fine job. Rafe worried though. He had to discuss matters with Jack concerned James, who had gone to his dorm. Rafe didn't look like he spent the better part of the last day flying across an ocean and back. Vampires didn't fatigue easily, though his eyes expressed a somberness that Jack was likely to pick up on. He arrived at the office door and entered after a knock and an invitation to enter. "Jack," he said in way of greeting. Right now he wasn't sure how Jack would respond or what he felt the course of action needed might be. Rafe was prepared to advocate on James' behalf because he had promised the fangling he would protect him. Anyone and everyone on the staff knew that Jack didn't look highly upon those who took life. His attitude toward Blake reverberated through the faculty. His feelings about Wendelin were likely the same, as the young Hydra had once taken the lives of students at school. Perhaps if Rafe's blood-soaked years had been within the last century and not over two centuries prior, he might've held him with a similar animosity. Thought it was a Cavanaugh to thank for why Rafe had become a vampire at all. He moved to sit down, "James is in his room. What would you like to know?" It was better to get to business. Jack might need a shot of whiskey soon once he learned that James, in fact, was responsible for the violent end of Dr. Styles. Some might even call it a fitting end. The jury was still out on whether or not Rafe felt that way, though having seen and heard and felt the impact of the words upon James, he was inclined to feel the boy's actions justified. |