Jack Marston (
accedence) wrote in
finalflight2019-06-20 03:45 pm
PSL; [FINALLY, SOMEONE LET ME OUT OF MY CAGE]

[Beecher’s Hope is about a twenty minute ride departed from neighboring towns or wandering curiosities, the wooden ranch house obscured by a jagged, cresting hill when approaching from a western direction. In its yellowing fields sits a dusty barn, a corral with restless horses stamping about their enclosures, and stretches of earth, dried and drained from crops that no longer exist. A grain silo stands watch over the land, less a sleeping sentinel and more a forgotten addition — its upper hatch is broken and no longer closes all the way (though it opens just fine), letting in a shaft of light to fall on what’s left of the neglected stock below.
And there’s not much left of it, long ruined by moisture, humidity, and neglect; molded and rotting the same way a corpse does, laying stagnant with no one person interested enough to tend to it. It is, honestly, a waste of food — perfectly good years ago, now just scattered, clumped remains. The whole silo isn’t even filled to the brim, the corn only tall enough to cover the ankle of a man’s boot. Not that there were many people wading through its interior these days.
Usually.
Jack doesn’t care enough to often wander out this far, his interest in ranching and farming and all those secondhand dreams long faded, dried up like the earth around him. But one of his horses has spooked — a black and white spotted thing, he calls him Twister, because he’s always running off and leaving him twisting in the wind — darting out this way like a bolt, leaping over the rails of the corral and knocking rotted wood over with back hooves. He can see him next to the silo, snorting out air through his nostrils, pawing at the dirt in irritation.]
Come on, I don’t got time for this right now, you dumb nag. [He clicks his tongue irritably, trying to shore up patience when he doesn’t have much of it to spare.] Come here, come here—
[Twister doesn’t care for his owner’s placating, half-hearted as it is. Offended at his approach, he gives a loud whinny, lurching up with angry hooves slicing at the air, hitting the old wood of the silo. It cracks and snaps, groaning in protest, setting the horse off even more; Twister twists his body around in the dirt and is off like an arrow shot out from a bow.]
Goddamn horse! [He starts after it, but Jack’s no fool. A few steps and he’s stopped, hand pressed hard against the silo and its new hole, cursing under his breath. His eyes lift to the damage done, and he mutters outloud like he were a man who actually cared about the state of his property, peering in:] Gonna let the damn birds in, now.

no subject
Still, he can’t help the incredulous snort that escapes him. ]
Your ranch? What is it you grow here? Mold?
[ He kicks at some of the rotted bits of corn, the toe of his boot scuffing the floor of the silo. There is a reason he chose to squat here, and really, can anyone blame him? The place is falling apart at the seams. Surely no one still lived here.
Or so he thought. ]
Needed the shelter for the night, that’s all. I am happy to move on if you are happy to let me out without shooting me, yes?
no subject
[He says, and suspiciously at that, ignoring the insult aimed at his property. Maybe Jack’s biased, being raised the way he was — among men who would call themselves “family” until they were ripped apart at the seams, as all gangs do — but he knows that people who are looking for a shadowed place to stay the night often have trouble dogging at their heels.]
Who you hiding from? This ain’t no place to squat.
[Not much in any direction, unless a man’s willing to ride out to town. There’s a big difference between squatting and hiding, so far as Jack knows.]
no subject
Don’t see how it much matters. You let me out and I’ll be on my way, and you can forget you ever saw me.
[ Probably not a compelling argument, but it’s all he’s got. ]
no subject
Y'could answer my question first, and then I'll think about letting you be on your way.
[Suspicious as he is, Jack's mind is already whirring. Trying to weigh his choices dependent upon what the other's reply is.]
As far as I reckon, you got the look of someone who has trouble right behind you. Unless you're going to tell me I'm just biased.