camkiskadden:
A little sensitive with the light, and double vision of a decently bad degree, if they weren’t just kidding around. Which they wouldn’t be. No hunter worth their salt - and salt was worth a hell of a lot, to their kind - would mess about at a time like this, and Kel had always been worth more than any up-and-comers Cam could recall. He nodded along, tucking that flashlight away to bring out a few more things. They weren’t that far out of it; Kel’s self-assessment could be trusted. Be unwise, and wasteful, to insult them by double-checking.
Anyhow. He’d got the distinct impression he’d insulted Kel enough, just by being here. By leaving. And they’d have to stay that way. For now, anyhow. For a while, maybe. Wasn’t like there’d ever be a good day for a hunter to hear the circumstances around their almost-Orator’s exit.
Back to his part of the reporting. The kid. Cam snorted, dryly, shrugging out of his coat. “That’d be Elias. He’s Aware, but not by much. Never met a wasp’s nest he didn’t wanna kick or a sleeping dog he’d let lie. Making himself medically useful, though…” Draping that coat around Kel’s shoulders - for the shock-cold, for the comforting weight of thick denim and a little sheepskin - Cam rattled some Tylenol out of his kit and held a couple over, with a bottle of water. “Take those, for starters. We could try and craft you something, too. Before the patch job.” Those scratches would need some patching, alright; even in the low glow of the desk-light Cam could clock the dark, seeped-through stains in Kel’s clothes. Lucky; a werewolf’s claws could’ve done a hell of a lot worse. “What d’you think, huh?” He’d left that loop of red thread around his wrist, genuinely waiting on an answer. A bit of crafting would help, but… Kel knew, well as he did - or, well as Cam had taught them, anyway - that when you were working on somebody else who had that will, working with was the wiser thing. Or it could just turn into a fight, and, Christ - neither of them needed that, tonight. Even if he might owe Kel some kinda scrap. After everything.
“Sounds familiar,” they said wryly and let their eyes fall shut. “Nurse or doctor? Guess it doesn’t matter, clinic could use his hands. Doc never has enough hours in a day.” The shift of fabric had their eye cracking open, just before the warmth settled over them. And just like that they were twelve and looking up at the ‘greatest hunter of a generation’ as he explained he was going to teach them to be good too. The weight sat like a hug, something more rare than he’d like to admit - though they’d also never admit they wanted more.
They swallowed the pills dry and took the bottle with their good hand. “Long as you think it’ll help, I don’t have a problem with it.” They hadn’t expected the words to feel true. It was hard to hold the anger of a few hours ago after a fight. Hard to hold any emotion really. Much easier to just start pulling the edges of the torn fabric away from the wound. “I’m decent with needles now, but it’d be hard to get my arm with his hand. Thanks... for helping.”
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