rachel-delacroix:
Rachelâs smile brightened a bit, feeling a bit better about her choice to move away from Lucas. It had been years since theyâd lived apart, and his codependency to her was a bit overbearing. Now heâd decided they didnât need separate offices at work, but could instead share an office, specially her office and heâd put his desk facing directly in front of her. Thatâs how sheâd found her office this morning. A disarray of her own things and Lukeâs, while his office was now home to one of his many pretty assistance. Needless to say, sheâd decided to take the rest of the day off. âHonestly Iâm lucky to have even snag this place while it was on the market. The woman who lived here before was moving to Florida for early retirement or something. Itâd only been up for a couple days and I managed to get approved. Itâs funny how these things happen, like itâs fate perhaps.âÂ
Perhaps she was rambling onâŠRachel tended to ramble when she was a bit nervous. Her mother hated the habit her daughter had, told her women should only speak when they had something intelligent to say. That was a bit sexist of her, but her parents were extremely old fashioned. Rachel turned to John as he spoke, smiling thoughtfully at his words as she handed him the bottle to set on the dining room table. It didnât go unnoticed that his hand brushed against hers, the light skin to skin contact sending somewhat of a shock up her right arm. Their eyes met briefly and she smiled, trying to come up with something to say. It was rare the CFO could be lost for words. âI like that take on it. Iâll use that when my business partner claims Iâm too much of a perfectionist. âWell Lucas, I apologize, itâs just ingrained in me, I simply cannot help it.ââ She joked, turning back towards the kitchen counter to grab the main entree. A traditional Cassoulet prepared in a slow cooker sheâd bought just a week ago. Rachel had been dying to use it that day sheâd purchased it but didnât have a good enough reason to open it yet. A homemade Cassoulet was just the thing.Â
She turned back around to face him, Cassoulet in hand as they made their way to the dining room. Of course heâd looked all right when heâd showed up at her front door, but sometimes these kinds of jobs had mental scarring on the employees as well. The fires had killed many people, it was hard to let that go unnoticed. âI feel safe here. Just with all the people dying, I mean there are plenty of other people Iâm far more worried about than myself. I mean one of our employeeâs sheâdâŠwell, sheâd just lost her brother to the flames, and they just donât seem to be stopping any time soon.â Rachel sighed, placing the Cassoulet down on the dining room table. It was set now, but something in her felt a bit saddened. Perhaps they shouldnât discuss the fires but something else instead. âAnyway though, Iâm glad youâre all right. My business partner decided weâd be sharing an office this morning, that was quite the treat.âÂ
âDo you believe in that?â he kept his eyes on her as he asked. John wasnât being cynical, his question was not meant as a challenge of belief. It was simple curiosity. âIn fate?â. The longer he lived in Port Ashbourne the more he had to reconcile with the fact that not everything was as structured and clear black-and-white as he once believed. There were things beyond his comprehension, things that he couldnât even see or proof by traditional means but knew full well that they existed. Maybe fate existed, invisible to peopleâs eyes but pulling threads together all the time. Maybe it didnât.
Rachel was somewhat nervous in his presence. He could tell by the way in which she spoke, still composed and sure of herself but with a subtle difference in her tone and how she talked a bit more now. He wished she would not feel that way around him, but he could not help but smile a little as she spoke. âGlad I could provide you with an excuseâ the Lieutenant stated with a brief laugh. He didnât laugh often, he had few reasons to do so other than with his daughter, and whenever he did it felt like taking a breath of fresh air. That was further confirmation of just how much at ease he felt around Rachel.
After she brought the cassoulet to the dining room, he pulled a chair for her and then took his seat. Hearing her speak of her concerns regarding others due to the fires made him want to tell her truth heâd find the other night: the police wouldnât be able to do anything to stop the fires because its source was supernatural. It wouldnât break protocol to tell her since that wasnât classified information of Port Ashbourne PD. They didnât even know that. But John was hesitant as to how she would react if he started speaking about a phantom-like creature of fire. âI wasnât alright the other nightâ he began, looking up at her as he decided to venture into the topic carefully. Judging by her reactions he could choose what to tell and what would be best left unsaid. âI nearly died in one of the fires. And this will sounds crazy but I saw something there, not just fireâ.













