Summary: When a new sandy-haired Deputy Sheriff arrives in town, you can't figure out why he gives you and the other Working Girls so little attention. It becomes your mission to figure him out and hopefully make some money along the way.
Warnings: 18+ minors dni, eventual smut, sex work, period typical attitudes, strangers to lovers, medium honor Arthur Morgan, angst, mutual pining, Deputy Callahan.
Thanks to @rivetingrosie4, @redwritr & @shootybangbang for all your help on this story and for being dreamy angels.
Chapter One - The Deputy
[chapter 2]
âGuess whoâs downstairs!â a voice interrupts from behind your door.Â
The autumn sun sits heavy in the sky, casting a warm pink haze that spills in through your bedroom window. You were supposed to start your shift an hour ago, but instead, you are here, sprawled out on your bed, hair undone, counting the money from the evening before. Muffled notes from the piano downstairs drift softly into your room. You inhale deeply on your cigarette, resenting all things that pull you away from these precious sleepy moments before you have to head downstairs. Make conversation. Smile. Perform.
Timekeeping has never been your strong suit, and you have lost count of the times Lulu had threatened to dock your tips for tardiness. These were empty threats, of course. You knew your position was secure - Even if Lulu liked to kick up a fuss in front of the other girls.Â
Brow furrowed, you take another drag from your cigarette. $15. $75 total from the week so far. Money hadnât been flowing as freely as it had done seasons past. The drought had hit everyone hard, and you knew, sure enough, if the boys were feeling it in the tobacco fields, it wouldnât be long till you were feeling it in the cat house, too. Seemed everyone was praying for rain. Still, Saturday meant full pay packets and men eager to let loose after the working week - something you were more than happy to help them with.
âWho!?â you call out, just as Minnie peeps her head around your door.
âChrist! You look like youâve been dragged through a hedge ass backwards! Luluâs been askin' after you?âÂ
You hum in response, dragging a comb through the bird's nest atop your head sweeping it up into a loose bun. âWho's got you all giddy? Surely not some John?â
âThat new Deputyâs back!â
You roll your eyes. âHow bigâs the pot now?â
â$5. $5.25, if you still fancy your chancesâ, Minnie smirks, perching herself at the foot of your bed, watching as you put the last of your face on. âbut Ida says sheâs out. She donât wanna waste more time on a Trick who donât want tricking.âÂ
âTricks always want to be tricked,â you say, rooting through the collection of bills and coins laid out haphazardly across your bed, handing Minnie 25Âą, which she slips into her coin purse.
Men were mostly the same. Sure, some might pretend to be respectable in the streets with their wives or taking their mothers to church on a Sunday, but youâd had every colour and creed between your legs. This deputy would be no different, and you were going to relish claiming the prize pot for yourself.Â
With a final drag of your cigarette, you smooth out your skirts and collect the pile of money on your bed, stashing it in your linen drawer - making a mental note to deposit it in the parlour safe before the night was out. Keeping that much money in your room is foolish, and if you were more sensible, you would deposit your tips between each John. But then youâd miss out on watching the pile grow. Evidence of your labour, your time, your craft. It wasn't like you worried you wouldnât get it back as soon as requested - Luluâd always been good about things like that, but to hand it over before youâd even had the chance to feel the paper fully in your palm seemed like it would make it less real somehow.Â
You turn to Minnie-
âYou ready?â
âGirl, Iâve been waiting on you!â
âLetâs give that deputy the night of his life.â
-
Although the sun is yet to set in the sky, the house is already live with music and laughter, the mezzanine balcony providing the perfect vantage point to assess what the evening might have in store. There are men fresh from the fields playing Faro, Lemoyne Raiders several whiskeys deep, a few of the younger, more boisterous Grays and the creepy gunsmith, Mister Feeney. Not amazing pickings, but not dire either. Then you spot him, sitting quietly on the table closest to the door, hat pulled low, scribbling something furiously into some book. An odd sight, all considered. You werenât sure most of the men in this town could read, let alone write.Â
Minnie squeezes your arm before descending the spiralled staircase, the Deputy firmly in her sights. You lean back to watch as she glides effortlessly across the roomâa vision in teal silk taffeta.Â
As you settle onto your hip, the fine hairs on your neck abruptly stand to attention as the air pressure changes behind you.Â
âSo kind of you to grace us with your presence.â Luluâs voice drips thick with syrupy disdain. Smile remaining tight. Never in front of the guests.
âPunctuality is a virtue of the bored, Miss Lulu.â You smile sweetly.Â
Sheâs not impressed.
âJust get to work. Make Some Money.âÂ
As you look back down to the floor below, a dispirited Minnie is walking away from the Deputy, his nose still firmly in his book. You bristle slightly. Did this man think himself better than the women who worked here? Sure, he was paying for drinks, but a man could drink at home if he was looking for solitude. In a parlour house, it was polite, proper even, to tip the girls, whether you require our services or not. And if the deputy didnât know this etiquette, you were more than happy to educate him. Prize pot be damned.
It was your turn to make the nightâs debut down the curve of the parlourâs stairs, something that on an ordinary night, you liked to draw out for as long as possible. Feel the eyes of each man gaze up at your form like they were watching a goddess descending from heaven, blessing them with your time. True power. But tonight, it takes everything in you not to stomp down the last few steps onto the floor.Â
That cad still isnât paying you a lick of attention.Â
âDeputy.â Your voice comes out curter than you intend as you reach him. You hope Lulu isnât close enough to overhear.Â
âMaybe another time, Darlinâ " the man responds without looking up.Â
Make conversation.
âDeputyâ You try again. âAre you aware of the price on your head?âÂ
The sound of pencil scratching comes to a halt as he turns to face you. To your surprise, you notice that he was drawing rather than writing as he snaps the leather-bound book shutâthe sound startling your gaze upwards to meet his own. And for the first time, you take in the scale of the man. Built like an Ox with broad shoulders and a barrel chest, upon which the words âDeputy Sheriffâ shine out from his silver badge. From this proximity, he looks unlike any lawman youâve seen.Â
He watches you intently as though trying to predict your next move - eyes a piercing shade of azure blue, locked dangerously onto your own. You have his full attention, but now youâre unsure if you want it.Â
âExcuse me?â
You swallow and try to make your next words lighter in tone.
Smile.
âNearly five and a half dollars, in fact.âÂ
His shoulders loosen ever so slightly. Eyes still on you but less predacious, perhaps even the suggestion of a smirk beginning to form at the corner of his mouth.Â
âFive and a half dollars? Thatâs some bounty. What I do, rob a bank?â
âWorse,âÂ
He rubs his jaw.
âOh?âÂ
âYou got five whores questioning our faculties. Thereâs a sweep on which lucky ladyâs gonna be the first to get you upstairs, but so far, no oneâs got as far as your name.â Â
A low rasp of a laugh passes the Deputyâs lips, and you feel a sense of relief as the danger in the air dissipates. Bluntness- this man responds to bluntness. And you wonder if you can hold his attention long enough to work your magic.
Perform.
âThere are normally two reasons a man mightnât want to lay with a girl like meâŠâÂ
You pause for effect, starting to have fun now.
âHeâs broke. Though that donât stop most from pushinâ their luck. Or theyâre queer.âÂ
The Deputy straightens and clears his throat. There is something delightful about making a man like this squirm, and you canât help but sense that he may be enjoying it too.Â
âSo which is it, Deputy?âÂ
You give him your most innocent of smiles. Hand finding purchase upon the swell of his shoulder, knowing full well that its removal could signal the latter of your accusations. You are being cruel now.
There is a moment of hesitation before the man can find the words to respond. Your unassuming smile not giving him an inch of wiggle room. Thumb beginning to make slow circles atop his shirt.
âI-Itâs just not really my thing. Payin' for it, I mean. Not that I canât, or - or-â Â
âOh? Thereâs some third thing I ainât privy to? A sweetheart somewhere youâre keeping true for?â
âNot really, no.âÂ
A hint of regret in his voice.
âThen why deny yourself a bit of company?â
You notice the tips of his ears turn pink and leave his lack of an answer to hang in the air for a moment before taking pity-
âDonât worry, Iâm just teasinâ, but you ought to know itâs customary to buy a girl a drink, even if you ainât planning on laying with her. We all have to make a living, Deputy, and this is my house.âÂ
And you're not sure if itâs out of a sense of gratitude at you relenting your line of questioning or because he has started to enjoy the warmth from your hand on his shoulder, but thatâs when he motions for the barkeeper to bring two drinks over to the table.Â
Your eyes dart over to Minnie, who is sat between two Grays. She throws you an encouraging wink, and you become keenly aware of the four other sets of eyes watching too. This is the furthest any of you has got with this man, and a wave of responsibility washes over you. You are going to earn that $5.25 plus the additional $5 when he fucks you. You feel foolish for ever doubting your ability in the first place. A man is a man, is a man.
âEthel Whiteâ, you hold out your hand âbut call me Ettie.âÂ
âArthur Callahan.âÂ
Arthur.
He nods to the chair across from him as he removes the leather book from the table and puts it away in his satchel. You pull out the chair next to him instead, purposefully pinning him between you and the wall.Â
âChrist woman, you ainât coy, are you?â he laughs, removing his hat, revealing a sandy crop of hair.Â
Without his hat, you are better able to take in the details of his face: the strong brow, the crook of a nose broken one too many times, a smattering of sunspots across his crown. Quite handsome, you think to yourself, a welcome change from the interchangeable looks of the Grays or Braithwaites who make up the bulk of your clientele.Â
âNot at all,â you smirk. âBesides, I want to take a look at what you were scribbling away at in that book. Must be awfully interesting to hold your attention so well.â You glance down at the journal now peeking out the top of his satchel. âIs that watercolour paper?â
âHuh?âÂ
âWatercolour paper, you know, to stop the paint seeping through and spoiling the rest of the pages? I saw you were drawing and-âÂ
He looks at you then, and you can see a slight flicker of shame cross his face momentarily. The feeling of someone pointing out the unfamiliar to a previously known thing, changing it somehow, making it less your own. You feel guilty. Watching him squirm was fun, but you never intended to make him feel foolish.Â
âI donât paint. Itâs for sketching mostly, keepin' track of the people and places Iâve been.âÂ
âYou do a lot of travelling, Deputy?âÂ
âA bit.âÂ
That instinct again, that there is more to this man than meets the eye. The lawman artist a walking contradiction.
âWhat do you paint then?âÂ
His question catches you off guard. Men like to be asked about themselves. They rarely ever show interest in you. A prick of heat flushes across your cheeks, and you hope the rouge of false abashment covers its authentic companion. Itâs you who is in control here - not him, goddammit. But his face is filled with genuine curiosity, like he wouldnât have asked if he wasnât interested, and thatâs what puzzles you further.Â
âUm, landscapes mostly, but I prefer painting people.â The words spill out before a filter of allurement or double entendre can be applied. âItâs just difficult to get people to sit for any length of time. Though Iâve painted all the girls here at some point or another.â
âWhereâd ya learn?â
And that is a question too far.Â
Youâd been gifted a great many things over the years, some thoughtful, most not, and learned the hard way how easily something given could be taken away. Youâre art though, no one could take that. You wondered sometimes if that had been an oversight when youâd been promised lessons. The techniques acquired the only remaining thing worth a damn apart from your horse. Leftovers from another life.
âDonât change the subject, Deputy. Are you going to show me your sketches or not?â Before you can stop yourself, you are leaning over him to grab at his satchel, totally aware that the danger this man displayed to you only moments earlier still lies just below the surface. With lightning-quick reflexes, he grabs the wrist of your right hand, firm in his warning. Do not push me, girl. But you have never been one to know when to stop. Your eyes are locked onto him as your breath comes in quick and heavy to your chest; You notice his start to slow. Heâs read you like a book. Left hand spearing from under the table to meet your secondary attack, pinning it against his thigh.Â
You look down at your fingers splayed out under the weight of his own. Knuckles scarred and calloused from a lifetime of work not typically required by law enforcement. The warmth from his thigh radiates beneath your palm, and it takes everything in you not to edge your fingers closer to the source of his heat.Â
He meets you with an expression you struggle to place. Not anger - though you couldnât blame him if it was. Amusement maybe?
âThink careful about your next move now, Miss. I wouldn't want to have to arrest you for larceny.â
You give him your widest of smiles and look carefully over your shoulder behind you. And as though suddenly clocking the inference of your shared position, Arthur lowers your right hand so it rests on the table rather than in the air. The grip still firm.
âIf I let you go, will you behave?âÂ
âWill you show me your drawings?âÂ
âWoman-â But he doesnât say no.Â
âIâll behave.âÂ
He looks at you, trying to figure out whether he trusts you.
âI promise.â
Gaze still set, he experiments loosening the grip on your wrist and then shadows the hand on his thigh - awaiting any sudden movements. You hold still. And for a moment, you see him grapple with himself as though he canât quite believe what he is about to do. He releases you fully, and you take back your right hand, leaving your left firmly in place. Â
âNow, if I show you, you gotta promise not to go grabbin'? Thereâs stuff a man should be able to keep private.âÂ
You nod.
He grins as he bucks his thigh, dislodging your rooted palm.Â
âHands behind your back.âÂ
With a playful huff you acquiesce, putting both arms behind you as though bound and look back at him coquettishly. And although he feigns disinterest at the way this new position pushes forward the peak of your chest, you catch his eyes dart across them, guilty in their haste.Â
He removes the leather-bound journal from his satchel, smoothing open two pages carefully on the table.Â
âHere. But thatâs your lot.â
Spread across both pages is a beautifully rendered sketch of the parlourâs exterior, and you donât know how to react. He stiffens slightly beside you.Â
âJust a silly doodle,â he says, moving to close the book. Clearly reading your quietness for disappointment, disgust, something else?
âWait-âÂ
To see the parlour captured in such effortless detail; The ornate carvings of the porch where you take your morning coffee, the Virginia Creeper that had to be cut back for fear itâd engulf the entire house, the hanging baskets of petunias that Lulu so lovingly tended to - feels exposing in a way youâd not expected. What other unnoticed minutiae had his perceptive eyes picked up on?
âItâs beautiful. Youâve captured it just right.â You half-whisper.
âAinât as good as a paintinâ.â
âDifferent thing entirely, but if you can draw like this, Iâm sure youâd make a fine painter.â
He gives you the smallest of smiles as you catch sight of Luluâs permeating glare as she sweeps down the central staircase. You are on the clock. If heâs not biting, move on. And you remember you are not here to discuss painting or art unless it serves your more explicit purpose.
âSee that top window at the back?â You make sure to graze his arm as you remove one hand from behind your back, bringing it slowly to the open page.
âThatâs my bedroom.âÂ
âOh?â
âMight you like to come up and see some of my work?â
You can see him contemplating the thought over in his mind, and you start to wonder if there really is some poor woman he is betrothed to⊠or perhaps your prior insinuation was correct, for you have never met a man so ill at ease at being in close proximity to a woman-
âMister Callahan!âÂ
You are both pulled away from each other's gaze as you turn to face your intruder. Sheriff Gray. And you are up and on your feet in an instant. Eyes twinkling with faux excitement to welcome this invader of fun, spoiler of all things delightful and new. Arthur straightens to attention.Â
âI see youâve met Ettie. Ainât she a peach? I hope sheâs been treatinâ you with all the hospitality we here at Rhodes can offer.â As he slurs his words, it is clear heâs already halfway soaked and once again, you feel Luluâs watchful eyes on the back of your neck. You have a responsibility to your house, and Sheriff Gray isnât any regular John. To keep him placated is to keep the house protected, and it is your duty to ensure the Sheriff remains happy and drunk, coddled and empty.Â
âOh, stop it!â You coo in his ear, wrapping your arm up tightly in his. Voice layered thick with honey.
The shine on his breath hits like a train, bringing tears to your eyes that you mask by nuzzling your head to his shoulder. He sags heavy on your hip, oblivious.Â
âYou didnât tell me youâd hired such a handsome new Deputy-''Â
Arthur shifts in his seat, and you wonder what detail of your performance his observant eyes have picked up on.Â
âYou keepinâ secrets from me, Sheriff? Or do you just want me all to yourself?âÂ
âIâd be lyinâ if I said I didnât.â Sheriff Gray hiccups and turns to face Arthur. âDo you mind if I accompany the lady upstairs?âÂ
Arthur stands, towering over the Sheriff by quite some measure and places his hat back atop his head.Â
âCourse not. You both enjoy your evening. Iâve to be headin' back anyway.â
For a second, your eyes meet Arthurâs, but his expression is impenetrable. The Sheriff speaks again.
âSafe travels, Deputy. Rhodes is honoured to have such honest men like you and Mr Mackintosh about. Your work rootinâ out that shine is already being felt around the county.â
Arthur nods. The effects of the shine are certainly being felt.
He hiccups again. âDonât be a stranger, now.âÂ
âDonât be a stranger.â You repeat, all traces of the sickly sweet affect gone from your voice. You yip as the Sheriff swats your backside, but you keep your head high, eyes still held on this curious lawman artist.Â
Donât be a stranger.
âMiss.â Deputy Callahan touches the brim of his hat as you lead Sheriff Gray upstairs to your room.
The GIF file for page 75 was not going through, but I donât think the quality will be ruined as much.
The last page for Chapter 2 will be an animated cutscene! If youâd like to see it being drawn to life, consider following me on Twitch and keeping an eye for any livestreams Iâll be holding from time to time!
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Summary: S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent, and close friend of the Sorcerer Supreme, Tazia Cozier, is inadvertently sent to a different universe where nothing is the same. To get his friend back, Dr. Strange sends the Winter Soldier across universes to find her and bring her home.
Warnings and Ratings: mild violence and language
Authorâs Note:Â What to say about this part? Uh. I obliterated Taziaâs back story and gave her an entirely new origin story, so I had to completely rewrite this part over the weekend? Which meant completely rewriting the next two parts. Which means Iâve been doing a lot of writing. And a lot of gawking at Jason Todd
Also, images found via Google Image Search. Credit where it is due, text added by me.
Series Masterlist
Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum had a firm grip on each of the Red Hoodâs biceps, and that grip only got firmer the more he tried to struggle. His heart was racing with rage and fear, he was caught and he couldnât rely on anyone to come to his rescue. All he could do was watch the psycho play with his bloodstained crowbar. Sometimes the solo gig really sucked.
His skin wasnât just deathly pale, it was white. Borderline translucent. It was unnatural. Disgusting. His fingers were long and slender, the chipped black polish on his nails lent to their feminine silhouette. In fact, thatâs usually what caused people to underestimate him. He was lanky, he looked delicate. Freaky, but delicate. But he was psychotic. Deranged.
Unhinged.
Both of those white hands gripped the crowbar like a baseball bat and he swung it like one. Aimed straight at Red Hoodâs knees. The sound his knees made buckling at the impact was more nauseating than the actual pain it created.
âYOU SON OF A-â Hood hollered.
âPlease donât say âbitchâ itâs just so boring,â he lamented, âat least say something funny!â
âFuck you!â
âThatâs not funny.â he frowned; hearing movement nearby he barked at Dee. âGo kill whatever that is.â
The bricks crumbled with the velocity of Taziaâs body, leaving an impact crater while she fell with the debris, her tailbone colliding with the pavement with a hollow thud. She felt like every fibre of her being had been shredded and torn apart, only to be put back together by an amateur puzzle enthusiast. It felt wrong. Painful. Whatever Mordo did to her, it hurt. A lot.
âPretty lady shouldnât be here.â Dee stumbled over his words, but his grip on his gun was steadfast.
âItâs rude to point a gun at a lady.â she had to fight to get the words out as she struggled to get to her feet.
âBoss said kill whatever made noise.â
âOh?â she needed to catch her breath, if she was going to fight, she needed to focus.
Focus on the fight, on the way her muscles worked, where they flowed easily and where they resisted her push. She needed to focus on the task at hand and push the pain out of her mind.
She needed to catch her breath.
Quickly, she swung her leg around, pushing Deeâs feet out from under him, sending him backward. But she didnât let him fall. She caught him. Jumping to her feet, she hooked her arm around his neck. and squeezed. She tightened her grip. Bit by bit. Struggling against the increasingly dead weight, she focused, still tightening the stranglehold she had on him. Until he was out.
Tazia had to use all of her strength to simultaneously let Dee down to the ground and catch his gun without making noise. Not yet anyway.Â
The poor fool still had the safety on his gun. She examined its metalwork, admiring its craftsmanship and wondering at its unfamiliar design. She gave the gun a quick once over, checking the barrel, chamber, magazine, and frame. Making sure everything worked as it should. Sliding the magazine back into the grip, taking the safety off and using the sight to take aim.Â
And then she pulled the trigger.
The sound of the gunshot echoed through the alley while Tazia walked quickly towards the other commotion. Her movements were quieter than those of a scurrying mouse, allowing for her to listen to what was happening. Allowing her to calculate her approach.
âYou think you can take control of Gothamâs underworld?â his voice was theatrical but grating. âThat is one greatâŠly underwhelming joke. How unfortunate.â
âScrew you, Joker.â Red Hood sneered.
âLetâs see whoâs under that hood, shall we? You know, I was once the Red Hood. Or did I once kill the Red Hood? Ha! Who cares?â the Joker cackled.Â
âI think I do.â Tazia interrupted, the muzzle of her gun pointed at the Jokerâs head. âLet the red guy go and maybe I wonât kill you.â
The Joker burst out in hysterical laughter, clutching at his abdomen. Tazia allowed him this indulgence, watching the peculiar way his borderline fluorescent green hair bounced, almost as though it were dancing to the tune of his laughter. At least she let him indulge his laughter until she got bored, pulling the trigger.
She could have killed him, sure. If she wanted to, she could have put the bullet in his left pupil. But she didnât. No, this was just a warning shot. This shot only grazed the side of his head, trimming a few strands of the neon hair and removing the top of his ear.
Within seconds of that shot, Tazia fired another. Without taking her eyes off Joker, she shot Dum in the knee, allowing Red Hood to get back to his feet.
âCome, dummy, get your brother.â Joker frowned. âWeâre leaving now.â
âYouâre not going anywhere, Joker.â Red Hood bellowed.
âWhatâs wrong with your pretty little girlfriend?â
Tazia had collapsed against the side of the building, having exhausted herself. She could no longer focus, no longer ignore the agony coursing through her body.
Red Hood took his eyes off of the Joker in order to check on the woman who had saved his life. It was all the Joker needed to slip away.
For a moment, Red Hood hesitated, debating whether he should chase the villain or save the girl.