Thinking about Plainclothes…I think it functions best as a story story on an emotional level about policing your own feelings and internalizing surveillance rather than a story about the police force but I do think that’s intentional and the way that it conveys the main character’s deep-seated anxiety and fear through the lead performance and the editing style (like when it switches to CCTV-style footage) is very effective. Something something how the film is shot mostly in cool or pale colors except for scenes between Lucas and Andrew where there’s more genuine warmth and color (the interior of the movie theater, the greenhouse). Also something about how the moment of greatest intimacy is cross-cut with the main character’s longest on-screen panic attack. Made me audibly go “oh shit” no less than three times. Carmen Emmi loves a close-up and Tom Blythe loves to convey anguish through his eyes so ultimately a match made in heaven.
Lucas thought staying true to himself was the hard part—until he did. Now a burned-out cop on leave and a stranger to himself, he’s quietly unraveling when he meets James: a literature lecturer with a calm voice, a quick mind, and no intention of letting Lucas disappear into silence.
who: Lucas Brennan (Plainclothes) x Original Male Character
rating: M
genre: queer romance (multiple chpt. long fic)
‘this formatting suggests a flashback/movie quote’
next chapter
The brittle sound of shattered glass being swept into a plastic bin was the first noise of the day. No one spoke, not yet. The two window repairmen moved methodically, booted feet tracking dried salt across the entry rug, hands steady in thick gloves as they removed the jagged remnants from the living room bay window.
Outside, the grey sky hung low, fat with unfallen snow, and the street beyond was silent but for the faint grumble of a snowplow somewhere in the distance.
Lucas stood near the front door, his back to the room, his arms folded across his chest in a way that made his broad shoulders look even broader—like he was holding himself in with sheer force. His hoodie was clean but faded, sleeves pushed up to his forearms, revealing hands that looked used to tension. He hadn’t taken off his baseball cap. He rarely did anymore. His jaw was clenched, mouth a tight line, and though his body remained still, there was an unmistakable electricity in his posture, the kind of charge that lingers in the body after a fight has already ended but the adrenaline hasn’t left.
He watched the men work without speaking, eyes sharp and unblinking. He wasn’t supervising, not exactly, but he needed to see it—needed to witness the pane being replaced, needed to know it was sealed, secured, solid. As if the right kind of window might undo the night he’d lost control and thrown uncle Paul through it.
The older of the two workers—mustache, red flannel, hands covered in weather-worn calluses—attempted some small talk as he passed with a rolled-up sheet of insulation. “Cold one today,” he said, with the stiff rhythm of a man who didn’t actually want conversation but knew it was expected.
Lucas didn’t respond. He didn’t even blink in the man’s direction. His gaze remained locked on the opening in the wall, the cold air seeping through the exposed frame, the splinters of old wood, the new glass leaned carefully against the wall like an apology waiting to be installed.
In the kitchen, behind a narrow partition wall, Marie stirred a mug of tea she hadn’t yet offered to anyone. Her movements were quick but not urgent, more habitual than useful, like she wasn’t sure what to do with her hands. The kettle had boiled twenty minutes ago and now sat cooling on the back of the stove, lid rattling occasionally with leftover steam. She was humming—tunelessly, a little too loudly—just enough to fill the silence, though it only made the quiet feel more suffocating.
She glanced into the hallway, drying her hands on a dish towel already damp from overuse. She wore her cardigan buttoned up to the throat, the collar of her blouse pressed but uneven. Her hair was curled tightly at the sides in the way she’d always worn it since Lucas was small. She had not spoken of the incident directly—not the broken window, not Paul’s bloodied face, not the words that had been shouted through tears and fists and half a decade of buried shame—but she had scrubbed the floor beneath the radiator three times since then, as if the violence had settled there like dust.
Eventually, she stepped into the living room, standing just beside the archway, her voice carefully light. “They’re doing a fine job, those two. Took out the last of the shards without fuss. You’d think it never happened, looking at it now.”
Lucas’s jaw worked once, but he decided against looking at his mother any longer.
She tried again. “You, ah… You think you’ll stay long at the flat? That little place near the university?”
He gave a vague nod, more a tilt of the head than anything. “It’s quiet,” he said, voice low and hoarse like he hadn’t spoken all morning—and maybe he hadn’t.
Marie folded the dish towel over her arm. “Quiet’s good, I suppose.”
There was a pause. The window was halfway done. One of the workers whistled through his teeth as he secured a panel. Lucas’s arms remained crossed.
Marie hesitated, then took another step forward, her shoes making no sound on the carpet. “Do you like it?”
Lucas finally shifted, only slightly, eyes darting cautiously to the corner of the window frame as if inspecting the seal. Then, in that same neutral tone that somehow felt heavier than a scream, he said, “The walls don’t yell.”
She stood there for a moment, the silence swallowing her reply. The tea on the stove had gone lukewarm. One of the repairmen sneezed and muttered a curse under his breath.
Marie didn’t scold him.
Outside, snow had started to fall again—slow, wet flakes that clung to the eaves and blurred the outline of the streetlamp across the road.
Inside, no one said the word that was hanging between them.
Not gay. Not ashamed. Not broken. Not Gus. Not San Francisco. Never the last.
The chairs in Marie’s kitchen still groaned the same way they had when Lucas was fifteen and sulking through detention notices, when his father had still been alive and his voice had still filled this house — not with joy exactly, but with a grounding direction, ease, and gentleness that uncle Paul had always found enjoyable to mock. Now, the chair beneath Lucas creaked under his frame in protest, and he shifted without reason, as if trying to get comfortable in a room that no longer wanted to remember who he was, or the version of him that had resonated with the rest of the family right until New Year’s Eve.
It felt good to throw a punch, exhilarating, even.
Marie moved around the table more than she needed to, profusely fussing on her way. She adjusted the salt shaker, wiped an invisible smear from the counter, turned a placemat one degree to the left, then right again. Her tea towel hung from the crook of her elbow. She had taken to wearing aprons even when she wasn’t cooking — as though dressing the part of “mother” might help her keep hold of the role.
On the center of the table, still warm beneath its foil lid, sat a heavy glass dish filled with beef and barley casserole — the sort of meal meant to feel like love, or healing, or nostalgia, depending on who you asked. Lucas hadn’t touched it, nor had she. The ladle rested askew in the dish, untouched except for the small dip of steam still curling toward the overhead light.
Marie placed a steaming mug in front of Lucas and sat opposite him, taking her own cup with both hands. Her palms were always red in winter — raw at the knuckles from scrubbing too much, too long, with too-hot water. She blew across the tea, although she didn’t drink it yet.
“Snow’s starting up again,” she said, her voice too bright for the weather. “They say we’ll get three inches before midnight.”
Lucas took a sip of his tea, too quickly to be about flavor. “Mm.”
Marie nodded to herself, glancing toward the window. “It’ll ice over by morning. The sidewalks near the church get treacherous when the plows don’t come on time.”
He gave no reply. He stared into the steam rising from his mug, elbows on the table, hoodie sleeves pushed to his forearms, his fingers unconsciously scratching at the inside of his other wrist. His hands looked tired, the kind of tired that comes from holding too much — tension, silence, and years of lying by omission.
Marie tried again. “I saw Mrs. Fallon outside Price Chopper yesterday. She asked if you'd moved out for good. Broken up with Emily.” Her smile was thin, not unkind. “She’s nosy as a cat, that woman.”
Lucas looked up, barely. “I have.”
“You really like the place?”
“It’s fine.”
Marie exhaled softly through her nose. “Emily came by, looking for you. I told her you were out walking. She said you weren’t answering your pager.”
Lucas shrugged with one shoulder. “Didn’t hear it.”
“She was worried.”
“She always is.”
Marie nodded, as though this answer satisfied her, even though it didn’t. She lifted her mug, took a sip, grimaced slightly — it had gone bitter while she’d waited too long to drink it, so she set it down again.
They sat in silence for another stretch, punctuated only by the sound of a car door slamming faintly down the street, and the low hum of the fridge motor kicking on.
Finally, she cleared her throat.
“Paulie Jr. said it’s a… leave of absence?”
Lucas stayed composed, but the sound of her voice seemed to draw a breath from somewhere deeper than his lungs.
“It is,” he said. “Indefinite.”
Marie’s eyes darted across his face, reading the short answer for clues she didn’t dare ask directly. She tightened her hands around the mug. “And how long does that usually last? I mean—do they give a… timeline?”
Lucas set his mug down slowly, precisely, as if controlling the way it touched the table might steady him for a moment longer. He didn’t meet her gaze. “However long it takes to convince them I’m not a risk.”
She froze for a beat too long. Then, too quickly, she nodded, swallowing absence. “Well. Nothing wrong with rest. Lord knows we don’t get enough of it in this family.”
Lucas made no reply. He leaned back slightly in the chair, his broad shoulders filling the space like a shadow stretching past its source. His cap still shaded his eyes, but he didn’t take it off. Not here. Not anymore.
Marie fiddled with her teaspoon, drawing slow loops in the tea like it mattered. She didn’t look up as she asked, her voice just low enough to carry guilt under the words: “Have you thought about going to church again?”
Lucas didn’t even pause. He looked directly at her now, not angry, not wounded — just tired of performing the conversation they always ended up in.
‘Get out.’
“I think I’ve done enough penance.”
Marie opened her mouth and closed it too fast to be unnoticed. Her fingers tightened around the mug. She blinked, slowly, as if to stop herself from reacting too visibly.
Lucas pushed his chair back. Not abrupt, but not gentle either. The chair scraped quietly over the linoleum. He stood, adjusted his hoodie, then looked toward the living room like he wanted to leave but hadn’t decided where to go yet.
Behind him, the tea steamed unnoticed. The casserole cooled.
Marie said nothing more. She just sat at the table, looking not at him, but at the folded towel beside her hand, as if it held the conversation they hadn’t been brave enough to finish, or even start.
**
By the time Lucas unlocked his apartment, the daylight had already been drained from the sky, leaving the hallway outside painted in dull orange light from a streetlamp that buzzed just above the stairwell. The building was a narrow brick walk-up with carpets that smelled faintly of cigarettes and old radiator heat, a place where the front door stuck in the winter and the neighbors didn’t introduce themselves.
He closed the door behind him with the careful push of someone who didn’t want to hear it slam. Inside, the flat welcomed him with its usual hush — not silence in the comforting sense, but that particular blankness that belonged to rented spaces untouched by personality or permanence.
Lucas dropped his keys into the ceramic bowl by the door. It had a chip on one edge, white once but now looked more like the color of ash. The keys made a dull, metallic clink as they settled, the sound bouncing once off the bare walls and then vanishing like a stone dropped in water.
He pulled off his hoodie in one fluid motion, arms rising in a tired stretch as the soft cotton dragged up the planes of his back, revealing for a moment the taut, narrow waist beneath the plain black T-shirt he wore underneath. He didn’t bother hanging the hoodie. It dropped to the floor and stayed there.
The apartment was technically a one-bedroom, but the door to the bedroom remained permanently open, exposing the sad geometry of a mattress on the floor, pushed into one corner under the smallest window.
There were no curtains. Just a crooked blind that bent strangely in the middle, letting in the streetlight’s wash of jaundiced light. Beside the mattress sat a milk crate doubling as a nightstand, a half-empty bottle of water, and a dog-eared book he hadn’t managed to finish. Not that he ever read a lot, not for pleasure.
Lucas walked into the main room, stepping over the faded rug and lowering himself slowly to the floor in front of the radiator. It was an old model, cast iron with chipped enamel, cold to the touch and moody at best.
He placed his hands on the metal and waited, half-hoping for warmth, half-knowing it wouldn’t come tonight. It rarely did on the first try. The boiler downstairs had a habit of sighing but not performing.
His fingers tapped absently against his knees. Across from him sat a chair—just one, wooden, a cushion tied to the seat with fraying straps. It had belonged to Emily once, probably part of a mismatched set in her parents’ basement. There were no pictures on the wall, no television, no clock ticking to mark the hours. The apartment felt less like a home and more like a hotel room someone had overstayed their welcome in.
On the counter by the kitchenette, a stack of unopened mail leaned to one side, its corners curled from time and inattention. Bills, circulars, probably a letter from the department’s HR office. Lucas hadn’t opened anything in over a week. It wasn’t that he was avoiding bad news. He simply couldn’t summon the energy to care about what came through the letterbox anymore.
Not since “Gus”.
The answering machine blinked with quiet insistence—a red dot pulsing in the half-dark like a tiny, irritated heartbeat. Lucas stared at it. The blinking continued for a while longer. He stood, crossed the room in three long strides, and pressed the button.
A static pop. Then a familiar voice, clinical and politely exhausted.
“Lucas. This is Sergeant Halden. Just checking in. You’ve got the paperwork on the desk referral already, but we want to make sure you’re considering it. There’s a group therapy option now for trauma-related leave. Confidential. No badge required. Let us know, alright?”
The message ended followed by the beep.
Lucas reached out and pressed the delete button with the same expression a man might wear swatting a fly off the windowsill; out of sheer reflex, devoid of anger or indifference.
He turned toward the glass. The main window overlooked the street, a narrow view mostly blocked by the neighboring building’s brick flank. The glass had smudges near the top, where someone else’s fingerprints remained faint but stubborn. He stepped closer and stared out, watching the snow collect in small crusted patches on the parked cars below. The street was empty. A lamplight burned, its glow stretched across the pavement like a deep, lengthy sigh.
He caught his own reflection in the pane and stilled. His face, partially framed by the baseball cap he still hadn’t removed, looked drawn and older than the nearly thirty ears he had managed to gather. His eyes were too pale against the gray world beyond the glass, the blue of them almost startling in contrast to the dull palette of the flat. His mouth, usually pulled into a neutral line, softened for a second—neither a frown nor a smile, just the pause that happens before a word that never arrives.
He touched the glass lightly, two fingertips resting against it. It was cold, but he didn’t pull away.
Finally, he moved back across the room and sat on the edge of the mattress. He decided not to undress or lie back. He simply sat, back hunched forward, arms resting on his knees, head lowered. A quiet pose, neither comfortable nor alert.
Breathing.
Existing.
Waiting.
‘one-two-three-one; one-two-three-one’
Outside, the snow kept falling. Inside, the radiator remained cold. The red light on the answering machine blinked no more.
‘one-two-three-one; one-two-three-one’
**
The knock, when it came, was brisk. Three quick taps and a pause — the rhythm of someone who had keys but still chose to knock for the sake of manners. Lucas didn’t answer straight away. He sat on the mattress, bare feet flat to the floor, listening to the silence stretch until the key turned in the lock and the door creaked open anyway.
When had he left her the keys again? Should he be grateful or terrified? He couldn’t decide.
Emily’s voice arrived before she did. “Jesus, Lucas,” she said, stepping in with a tote slung over one shoulder and a brown paper grocery bag in her arms, “this place could really use a gay man.”
Lucas, still dressed in flannel sleep pants and a threadbare black T-shirt, lifted his head slowly, eyes narrow beneath the brim of his cap. “Very funny.”
“I wasn’t trying to be.” She nudged the door closed with her hip and kicked her boots off by the radiator with an usual clatter, as if she had lived here in another life. “I mean that as a professional observation. Have some fantasy. Or, you know, pride.”
Emily was tall in a stretched-out way — legs that took up too much space in narrow hallways, a long spine that made her lean forward when she sat, as though her limbs were always a bit too much for whatever chair she occupied. Her hair was dark, worn down to her shoulders in a messy part she smoothed only when she remembered. Her face was round in a way that made strangers trust her, her eyes soft-set under expressive brows that rose whenever Lucas opened his mouth.
She dumped the bag on the counter without looking, peeled off her coat, and surveyed the apartment with narrowed eyes. “I hope you haven’t been bringing dates here. Or friends. Or literally anyone with working tear ducts.”
Lucas didn’t answer, but stood slowly, rubbing the back of his neck, and crossed to the kitchenette. “What’s in the bag?”
“Essentials,” she said, unpacking with a quiet ease. “Apples, bread, two tins of soup, a bunch of books and a wine that cost slightly more than bus fare. You’re welcome.”
“You didn’t have to.”
She stopped unpacking and fixed him with a look. “Of course I didn’t. That’s why I did it.”
Lucas sat down at the tiny kitchen table, its surface warped from heat damage. One chair for him, one dragged from the other corner of the flat for guests, even though he didn’t really had any. Emily took the second seat without invitation, her knees knocking his under the table. She opened the wine and looked around for glasses, gave up, and poured it into two odd ceramic mugs — one blank, one with a faded cartoon dinosaur that might’ve once been funny.
“Cheers,” she said, and raised her mug before taking a long sip. “You look like someone who’s been haunted by a very dull ghost.”
Lucas snorted faintly. “Thanks.”
She leaned back and glanced toward the window. “Did you even open that today? You know, to let some oxygen in? Not just spirits?”
“I went for a walk.”
She raised an eyebrow. “To the end of the hall doesn’t count.”
He didn’t defend himself. He took a sip of wine and grimaced. “Tastes like shoe polish.”
“That’s the oak finish,” she said brightly.
They sat in silence for a few moments. The heat finally came on with a sudden clang from the radiator, followed by a low hissing that reminded Lucas of train brakes. He stared at the edge of the table.
Emily, always watching, shifted her tone.
“You heard from him?”
Lucas didn’t look up. “No.”
She let that rest a moment before speaking again. “And you’re not gonna call him either, are you?”
Lucas gave a humorless laugh. “How? The number is not in service anymore.”
“Because you still think he didn’t mean it.” Her voice was low now, not sharp, but far from soft either. “Because somewhere in your tender, overtrained brain you’ve convinced yourself that whatever he gave you counts as real. That secrecy and sting operations and being touched like a crime scene counts as intimacy.”
Lucas pushed the mug away. “I didn’t say any of that.”
“You didn’t have to.”
He exhaled through his nose, slow. “You don’t understand.”
“No, you’re right. I don’t. Because I never had to seduce someone in a public restroom to arrest them. I’ve never had to use my own mouth to bait someone and then call it justice.”
Her tone was still level, but her eyes were bright with things left unsaid. “But I do know what love isn’t, Lucas. And that wasn’t it.”
He rubbed his palms together under the table, long fingers pressing into the worn skin of his knuckles. “It was real.”
Emily leaned forward, resting her elbows on the table, hands wrapped tight around her mug. “A bruise is real, too. Doesn’t mean you keep hitting yourself to prove it’s still there.”
She reached out and placed her hand lightly on his shoulder. Her fingers didn’t grip, only rested, warm and familiar.
“You don’t miss love,” she said quietly. “You miss heartbreak. How long did it last, anyway? A month? Two weeks?”
Lucas stared at the far wall. A thin crack ran through the plaster near the ceiling, too high for him to have noticed before. His throat worked, jaw flexing once, and then—still without meeting her eyes—he said, “I just don’t think people like us get anything better. Not really.”
Emily blinked once, then twice. Her voice, when it came, was lower than before, nearly gentle.
“You get what you allow,” she said. “And you’ve allowed shit for years.”
Lucas nodded slowly, once. He didn’t say thank you. Emily didn’t expect him to, anyway.
They sat in silence again, the only sounds the hum of the heating and the snow beginning to tick softly at the window like small, cold reminders that outside existed and took no prisoners.
**
The streets looked washed out under the yellow sodium lights, like the whole city had been leached of color and left to dry in the cold. Slush gathered in the gutters, pushed into thick gray ridges by the front tires of delivery trucks earlier that day. Now it lay frozen and rotted with road salt, piled high against the curbs, crusted with gravel and cigarette butts. The sidewalks hadn’t been shoveled properly, but Lucas didn’t care. His boots pushed through the half-melted snow with a low grind, each step leaving a rough track behind him that the wind immediately began to fill.
He kept his cap pulled low and his hoodie drawn tight over it, shoulders hunched, jaw set — the posture of someone hoping not to be seen, and confident that no one would care enough to look anyway. His breath rose in slow, damp clouds, the condensation catching light now and then, turning his exhale into a faint shimmer before it disappeared.
No one paid attention to a tall man walking alone in the middle of winter after ten p.m. in a residential neighborhood where the porch lights had all been turned off early. He liked that. He preferred it. He wanted space without interruption, silence without witness, streets that belonged to no one and asked nothing in return.
He passed shuttered storefronts, the blinds inside yellowed and drawn down unevenly. There was a barber’s shop on the corner where the pole still spun, though the shop had been closed since noon, the red and white stripes chasing each other in slow, mindless spirals. He walked past the laundromat next, the lights off but the smell of detergent still clinging to the sidewalk outside. A flickering neon sign across the street stammered through a single broken letter in the word DRY, making it look like CRY for one slow second before blinking out altogether.
Lucas didn’t stop walking. He didn’t dare slow down.
He turned onto a narrow side street where the snow hadn’t been plowed at all, and his boots made louder crunching sounds. The streetlamp at the corner buzzed and cast a warped shadow across his back. His breath came faster now — not from effort—his body was used to excessive trainings—but restlessness, like his own thoughts were walking faster than he could keep up with.
And then, half a block ahead, he saw the church.
It stood quiet, heavy, its stained glass windows black from the inside out, the steeple pointing toward the overcast sky. The door was chained shut, though the steps had been cleared, probably by an old volunteer who hadn’t yet decided to give up on what Lucas no longer found comforting. A cardboard sign had been tacked onto the railing in blue pen: Soup kitchen returns next Tuesday.
‘I’m not a priest. I’m a reverend.’
Lucas stopped across the street. He didn’t cross over, just kept staring at the building, his hands in his coat pockets, his jaw clenched tightly enough that it ached.
The last time he’d stepped inside that church had been for his father’s funeral — short, plain, full of men with handshakes too hard and voices that kept saying He was a good man, your father, as though goodness had anything to do with what the dead could or couldn’t deny. Uncle Paul had made a speech that day too. So had the priest. The word grace had been said three times. God at least ten.
He let his eyes rest on the closed doors, long enough to remember the feel of old pews, the creak of polished wood beneath pressed trousers, the taste of anger pushed so deep into the chest it came out bitter and metallic.
Then he kept walking.
The wind picked up as he passed the edge of the park. It wasn’t large — a few swings, a winding path, one statue of a horse with a chipped hoof and pigeons always nesting on its ears. Most of the benches were empty, as they should be in winter, but as he turned down the path that led past the oak tree, his steps slowed.
There was someone sitting on the bench.
A man — maybe mid-to-late twenties, not dressed for warmth but not exactly foolish either, wrapped in a wool coat with the collar turned up, one leg crossed over the other, a paperback book held open in his lap with a gloved thumb tucked into the spine. His hair was dark and a little messy at the back, and his posture was relaxed in a way Lucas didn’t trust. He wasn’t hunched over for heat. He wasn’t muttering to himself. He wasn’t even moving his head to check for danger.
Just sitting. Reading. On a bench. Alone. At night. In Syracuse. In January.
Lucas stopped a few paces away, not facing him directly, but enough to glance sideways. He couldn’t make out the title of the book. The print was too small, the light too dim. The man didn’t look up. He simply turned a page and kept reading.
Lucas’s face felt too cold to form a decent frown. But inside, the question rattled through him louder than he meant it to.
Who the hell reads outside in this weather?
He stood there for another beat, maybe two, caught between disdain and intrigue, the kind that made you want to scoff but not look away. Then he shook his head at the picture, stuffed his hands deeper into his pockets, and kept walking.
He didn’t look back.
But the man on the bench stayed in his mind all the way home — the way he’d looked entirely comfortable in a place that wasn’t meant for comfort, and the quiet certainty with which he turned that page.
Lucas didn’t know it yet, but that was the first page of his own story that had shifted.
**
The door clicked shut behind him without ceremony, a dull scrape of wood meeting frame, a low thud into silence that had already been waiting inside the flat long before he stepped across the threshold.
Lucas kicked off his boots without untying them, the soles thudding against the floor with a wet slap that left two dark prints on the linoleum. He stood there for a moment, still wearing his coat, his cap, even his gloves, as though the cold outside might follow him in and require some show of resistance. The heat had either not turned on or given up sometime earlier in the day, and the air inside the apartment was dense with the kind of chill that settles into the corners and stays, unwelcome but patient.
He didn’t bother switching on the light.
Instead, he walked the short path to the mattress — the only soft thing in the room that wasn’t covered in dust — and sat down heavily, letting his shoulders fall forward, arms braced on his knees, chin nearly touching the zipper of his coat. He stayed like that for a while, unmoving, the only sound the faint buzz of the overhead light in the hall just outside his door, leaking through the crack at the floor like a distant engine.
Beside the mattress, in the pile Emily had dropped off weeks ago with a shrug and a tight-lipped smile, sat a paperback. The cover was worn, the corners turned down, and the title — The Heart is a Lonely Hunter — stretched across the spine in faded serif font. He reached for it with one hand, thumb brushing across the edge like he meant to open it, but he didn’t.
The weight of the book was modest, but steady, the sort of object that didn’t beg attention but held it quietly. He stared at the cover, not reading the title again, not even thinking about the words inside, just looking at it — the curve of the spine, the faint outline of a tear stain that had probably belonged to someone else. Maybe Emily. Maybe her friend, or the library.
His thumb rested along the edge for another moment before he set it down on the mattress—a slow surrender, as though reading was a language he no longer spoke fluently, and the translation effort was too much for one night.
He stretched out without removing his coat, the fabric rustling against the thin sheet as he lay back, eyes open, arms resting at his sides like he didn’t quite know what to do with them. The ceiling stared down, blank and unmoved, its paint uneven in places where moisture had left pale ghosts across the plaster. A crack ran along the far left corner, fine and barely visible, like a line a child had drawn in pencil and then never finished.
Lucas followed it with his eyes, then let his gaze settle in the middle distance, somewhere between sleep and stubbornness.
And then, in a voice low enough that it barely made it past the cold air between him and the ceiling, he said it—another line drawn in cement.
“There is no such place as San Francisco.”
He didn’t expect an answer, and the room gave none.
Only the fragile creak of the radiator, trying and failing to warm the freezing bones of the night.
Was tagged by the wonderful @cyrano2021dirjoewright to share my fave 1st-watches of September and... friends it was not a prolific movie month for me (O_O)
Thank you Kate for introducing me (and bringing me to) this!! I really loved it!!!
I tag @sailor-freddie-mercury [you have been double-tagged!], @sour-charity, @t-boyfriend, @leonardcohenofficial, @atouchofsass, @possiblemusic, @boostockingbaby, and anyone else I've forggoten/who would like to participate!!
wtf plainclothes was such a good movie??? on god, we’re going to get you that oscar russell tovey. and i have to apologize to tom blyth, i was unfamiliar with your game…..