Hellion’s laugh echoes between the two and for a couple of heartbeats, Twelfth’s eyes leave the bandits and look at the man who she’s meant to call company, half of the duo that’s meant to keep an eye out on the train station ( though, all she’s met with is someone that is far too quick to surrender to boredom and not easily predictable because of it ). Twelfth looks at Hellion and they can’t decide whether to be annoyed by the reaction or shudder at it, letting the laugh run down their spine like a bad feeling.
A bad feeling that’s almost immediately justified.
Twelfth’s eyes land back on the bandits but their nostrils flare up at Hellion’s lack of care. They never expected him to try that hard to help them; the most they thought they’d see — or rather, hear — was Hellion say something to the bandits, something other than the immediate submission he seems to have taken to. Perhaps a warning, a mean stare to make the bandits feel less inclined to get closer but he gives them nothing. Absolutely nothing. They can’t help but still be disappointed for some unknown and frankly irritating reason yet, at the same time, not at all surprised.
There’s a sharp, exasperated sigh that leaves Twelfth’s nostrils. Eyes still on the bandit leader ( but always aware of the rest of their sorry excuse for a group ), the former Family member plays with a non-existent ring on their finger, a tattoo that doesn’t move but still burns whenever they pretend to move it. The Mother taught them a lot, teachings that will not be tossed to a dust storm and forgotten.
Before the leader can get any closer, too close for comfort, Twelfth raises their gun and points it at the middle of their forehead. “I said that’s close enough.” Voice is sure, unshaken and harsh. It’s sad how easily their frustration slips through the cracks. They’re not ready yet, they realise, to stand so close to a man and aim at their head, finger so steadily on the trigger and no hesitation seeping in.
( Mother, if you’re here with me, don’t let me forget what you so lovingly taught me. Don’t let me forget how to kill a man with a quick and sure shot, even if I used that same teaching to kill your son, my brother. )
“I know my partner here might come off as a coward,” Twelfth starts, spitting out the same word Hellion used for them only seconds before, “but don’t confuse me with him.” If Hellion wants to be of no-help so he can sit back and enjoy the show, then he’ll get the shit he deserves for it. “Any of you take another step, you move another inch or reach for your gun and you can watch your leader’s brains splatter on the ground in front of you.” Twelfth doesn’t want to, they really don’t— not because they will lose sleep over it but because they know it’s not the smartest move to start shooting near the train station.
Despite the fact they’re not the biggest fan of it, Twelfth keeps to their word— the leader tries to reach for their gun and Twelfth pulls the trigger. It’s surprisingly easy to shoot just about anyone when you’ve already shot your brother, your family, your heart. They train their gun on one of the others and ready themself for what is a very fragile situation: the rest will either scurry away or they’re actually a lot more reliable than Hellion could ever be and they’ll try to avenge the head of their little group. Twelfth is ready for either.
I said that’s close enough. Twelfth’s warning cuts through the air with enough force to send a little chill hopping down the knobs of Hellion’s spine. His eyebrows shoot up high, surprise surprise softening the hard lines of his face. It’s not the command itself that galls him, no—it’s the bite behind it, cold and hard as steel. If he wasn’t watching Twelfth with his own two eyes, if it was Paragon reciting this story to him, he’d write it off as a one of the raconteur’s make-believe anecdotes, well-woven but untrue. But he is watching Twelfth, and he sees them, clean through, for perhaps the first time.
And then she calls him a coward, and though his pride bristles, and though his instinct is to raise his hackles, to bark and bite, he refrains, if only because he knows a fishing lure when he sees one. She’ll have to do better than “coward” if she intends to bait him into sticking his neck out for her. Would that Paragon were here, or even Rambler; Paragon, who knows well enough how sway the immovable needle of Hellion’s compass with well-placed words, and Rambler, who knows how to ply him with games and tricks, cloaks and daggers. Pity for Twelfth that both are far, far away from here.
You can watch your leader’s brains splatter on the ground in front of you.
Hellion thinks she’s bluffing, and so, too, does the gang’s leader, apparently. Turns out she’s not bluffing, not by a long shot, and the gang’s leader pays handsomely for his error in judgment. Hellion lets out a low, impressed whistle as the rest of the small gang stares in horror at their felled leader, whose brains are indeed splattered on the ground before them, as promised. “Good shot,” he muses, and he means it.
The gang has a choice to make now: tuck their tails or bite back. He watches them as they no doubt weigh the pros and cons of flight or fight. He banks on them opting for the latter, so he makes quick work of running his own list of pros and cons.
Pro: if the gang advances and Hellion aids Twelfth, he’ll get to fight or kill or both, which means he’ll get to scratch that ever-present itch of his.
Con: if the gang advances and Hellion aids Twelfth, Twelfth will live another day—or rather, Twelfth will cry about their dead brother another day, and then another, and then another.
Pro: if the gang advances and Hellion doesn’t aid Twelfth, she will perhaps not live another day, which might awaken something monster-like in Farrier, which will be great fun.
Con: if the gang advances and Hellion doesn’t aid Twelfth, one of his fondest sources of entertainment will be dead, likely, and he’ll be a little bored without Twelfth’s at-times-diverting company. Also, he thinks the gang might not be too happy to hear he left one of their own for dead.
In the corner of his field of vision, he sees one of the gang pull a revolver from his waistband. Fight it is, then, not flight. He huffs a petulant sigh as the right call grows clearer in his mind’s eye. “Fuck,” he mutters under his breath, using the toe of his boot to kick the barrel of his shotgun up off the ground and into his hands. He cocks the hammer of his shotgun quickly, smoothly, like he’s been doing it all his life, like it comes as naturally to him as breathing. He has, and it does. Before the gang can retaliate, he fires, cocks the hammer, and fires again. He does this twice more, until none of the gang are left standing.
“You’re welcome,” he says emphatically to Twelfth. It’s a frankly ludicrous remark. You’re welcome for hanging you out to dry and watching you almost die for sport, and then deciding to come to your aid in the eleventh hour to avoid being drawn and quartered by the rest of the gang. “What a waste of gunpowder,” he laments.