elizabcthward:
“Jesus Christ.” Something about the thought of Jim Ward walking around in his underwear, clearly disoriented and out of his damn mind, is incredibly jarring. Liza may not like the way her father treats her nor does she agree with half the shit he says, but she loves her father. He’s always been a strong anchor in their family, a man she’s admired for her entire life and truthfully, she may have accidentally ended up becoming a little too much like him. So to witness him the way he is now, the way he has been the last few months since she’s been home, is enough to keep a pit lodged in Liza’s throat that she constantly has to try and push down.
She doesn’t even respond to Thatcher, not entirely sure what to say when it comes to their father and his ailments. Liza isn’t the sentimental type and she’s got no words of sympathy for her brother, no sorry to give for not being here sooner. Instead she just kicks off her shoes and situates herself onto the end of the porch swing where he’d made room for her, tucking her legs underneath herself as she settles in. It’s Liza’s way of letting her guard down, because she wouldn’t go and get this comfortable in front of almost anyone else, but the comfort of her brother is enough to keep her usual antics at bay.
So she’ll sit here and smoke his pot with him, trying to forget yet another catastrophic family dinner on the back porch like they’re teenagers again. It’s nights like these that make her nostalgic for her old life here and long for the city at the same time. “Tastes like dirt and I’m about as high as you are straight.” Translation: not very. Still, Liza takes another hit, gently passing it back over this time. “Dad know you’re doing this?”
-
He’s fine most days. That’s the line he feeds everyone who asks about his father. Somedays it’s because he really is fine, others it’s because he knows his father wouldn’t want everyone in town knowing what state he’s really in. When he tells Ari that Jim is okay, it’s because he doesn’t want her to worry. Most of the time though, it’s just because he’s too tired to talk about it. For Liza though? She gets the truth of it. As soft as he can make it, but still the truth. “It’s not lookin’ good, Lizard.”
Her accusation catches him off guard, mid inhale. His throat tightens and thick smoke hits his lungs too fast. And before he knows it, Thatcher is doubled over seized by a coughing fit. “Don’t,” he chokes out, alarm clear in his voice. “Just don’t.” How Liza knew something that Thatcher has never once admitted to out loud, Thatcher will never know. A magazine tucked under his bed, discovered by a snooping sister? An app alert on his phone with an icon she recognized? Maybe she could just tell that there was something more they had in common than their last name.
It has always made Thatcher feel closer to her, even if he’ll never admit to it. But it’s also made him just a little terrified of her. “Whatever you think I am, keep it to yourself.” He wants it to sound like a command, but between the anxiety in his chest and the smoke in his lungs, he knows he sounds like he’s begging. “Sorry it’s not as good as whatever wild shit they got in the city. Out here we just gotta make do with what we got.” Hopefully it’s clear to Liza that he’s not just talking about the pot.
“Besides, you took one hit. You gotta give it a minute. I know you’re not new to this.”











