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#bout to be back in my matty era
taylortruther · 8 days
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You guys are not going to like this, but I have a theory that loml might be about two people, and those two people are NOT Matty and Joe.
At this point we can all agree that nearly every song on TTPD is about two people...so my theory for loml is that it's about Matty and Harry.
Okay, so the Matty references are obvious. Now putting aside the obvious point that Harry has a song called 'love of my life' already, I still have other reasons to believe it's about him.
Firstly Taylor seems to attribute many songs se has written bout someone at first to another person later. I get the feeling she did that with many 1989 songs, relating them to Matty after she met him. I think while revisiting what went wrong with Matty, she was taken back to the 1989 "era", if you will, and found some inspiration.
Also, in loml, she talks about "waltzing back into rekindled flames", a very "when we go crashing down we come back every time" esque lyric. Obviously it can apply to Matty as well, but I just wanted to point that out.
Also the "we were just kids, babe" line rubs me the wrong way because Taylor or Matty or Joe were NOT kids when any of them met.
Harry was 18 and Taylor was 23 when they dated though. They made mistakes and got back together and so on and so forth.
The ghosts/phantoms/cemetary references remind me of Two Ghosts, the song Harry famously wrote about Taylor. Also, "Mr Steal Your Girl" and One Direction has a song called Steal My Girl.
Also, I feel like loml has a lot of the same themes as Question..?, which imo is also a song that's about both Harry and Matty? Like her most famous "kiss in a crowded place" was the NYE one with Harry? Also the glaring callbacks to OOTW is always so confusing to me. Like the song is to be interpreted as a Matty song because of the dickhead guy line, but then why so many 1989 references?
Maybe because those two relationships in her life were so close together and both very quickfire, fleeting yet impactful...so she tends to intermix both at times.
Again, I'm not a haylor and OH GOD NEVER a maylor...this is just my theory. I mean she references past players in her life like Jake and Kim and even Calvin if you consider the 'bully' lyric in Chloe et al...so it got me thinking thoughts.
mmm i am not convinced. i mean, anything is possible, sure, and inspiration can have many sources. but... what is the broader implication of these callbacks that you think she's making to harry? do you think he is the love or loss of her life? does this return anywhere else on this album? why do you think she might want to reflect on that, when the epilogue makes it clear this album is about her feeling a "restricted humanity" that led her to making specific decisions that were "self harm"?
i do think you're picking up on how taylor revisits themes throughout her discography, though.
she's been singing about ghosts (bad blood, cardigan), being haunted (sparks fly, haunted), wanting to haunt people (tim mcgraw, wildest dreams), memories torturing her (the "what if" in chloe et al for example but also all too well!) for her entire career - but especially later, because, well, the older she's gotten the more memories she's made or regretted.
imo this is one of the reasons why i look in people's windows is so poignant. "i'm afflicted by the not knowing, i'm addicted to the 'if only'" - this idea, concept, theme, motif, whatever, appears in her entire discography.
as for "we were just kids, babe" - it's not a literal line about being being a minor, it's about revisiting the past and hoping to rectify past mistakes. we see it resurface throughout her discography as well (like 1989 and midnights, as you pointed out!), but especially this album: here at the park where we used to sit on children's swings wearing imaginary rings (fots), he was my best friend down at the sandlot (my boy), you said you were gonna grow up then you were gonna come find me (peter), down that passage in time back to the moment i crashed into you...too impaired by my youth to know what to do (chloe et al.)
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nriacc · 5 months
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is it over now by taylor swift is so alex and wheels coded during the pauline era
“rumors bout my hips and thighs’ , ‘fast forward to 300 takeout coffees later’ , ‘i was hoping that you’d be there and say the one thing ive been wanting but no’ , ‘you dream of my mouth before it called you a lying traitor’ THE LYRICS JUST FIT A LIL TO WELL…
(ur fic has affected me so much that no matter what song im listening to i always manage to tie it back to wheels)
Omg it really really is. I know I've been saying for years that I'll do it but I swear I really will make the Wheels timeline taylor swift playlist soon. Don't you think Dress is such a good bit for when shes getting ready for her date with Alex? God it makes me emotionallllll! I will make this playlist soon, I need it desperately. Any help/suggestions please keep them coming because I'm not as well versed with taylors older albums as I'd like to be.
I also can't help but this this song fits so well with on the AM tour when Wheels is still hung up on Matty after he's cheated. Because she practically calls Matty a traitor, and hes the one she wanted, and all the rumours about her and Alex on the tour. God theres so many because Say Don't Go fits so good too.
ALSO GIVE ME SLUT FT THE 1975 RIGHT TF NOW BECAUSE THAT SHIT IS SO WHEELS CODED IMMA FUCKING CRY RIOT!!!
(Also I'm glad its not just me that does this because massive same, forever I'm like OH ITS WHEES!)
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ludi-ling · 4 years
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Crazy Eights
Well, here it is, a little treat for my followers - the first chapter of Crazy 8′s, the sequel to 52 Pickup. I’m sharing since it’s Day 7 (AU) of Rogue/Gambit Week 2020. I don’t know if I’ll ever finish this story, even though I got a fair way through it, since I wrote myself into a corner, and I’m not sure I like it very much. But I hope you like it anyway. Enjoy!
Crazy Eights
Chapter 1
               Thieving 101.
               Simplest rule in the book.
               Don’t get caught.
               I can hear pere’s voice in my head, clear as day, literally beatin’ the words into all of us, his snotty-nosed, grass-stain-scuffed li’l Fagin’s gang.
               Don’t. Get. Caught.
               And then his face, leaning in towards mine, grinning, saying:
               Unless, o’ course, you have a reason t’get caught.
               Yeah, that was mon pere, full of good, subtle ideas. He’d usually direct them at me cos he knew I was like the worst kind of sponge. I’d be soakin’ all that shit up, swimmin’ in it like a gator swims in swamp water.  As a kid, I’d always figured he was just picking on me. As an adult, I realise all he was doing was laying down challenges, cos he knew this punk-ass kid would rise to the bait every time, pushing every damn boundary he could along the way.
               You got potential, boy. But you got no discipline. Always halfway t’ bein’ in a rage, t’ ventin’ it out on some poor trash. You play de con, kid, you live de con. No heart-on-your-sleeve shit.  Dat stays inside. Cos y’know what? Folks can read dat crap a mile away.
               “C’mon, pretty boy,” the man to my right grunts, as the alarms I’ve set off still scream all around us. “Getcha arse in gear. The boss don’t take kindly to waitin’.”
               He prods me in the back with the barrel of his gun, a little too sharply than is strictly necessary; but I get it, he has a job to do, and actin’ mean is part of it.
               “Yeah, well, that’s what bosses are like, mon ami,” I answer with a smirk. “Never got time for nothin’. Mebbe you should think about goin’ freelance, neh?  It has its advantages.  No calls at unsociable hours… Don’t gotta do all the dirty work y’self… Get t’ have a couple of pretty femmes hangin’ on your every word… Still. I reckon mebbe you two ain’t smart ’nuff yet t’ graduate from the ol’ ‘Crime Boss 101’ course, am I right?”
               “Hey!” The guy to my left gives me a crack on the back of the head with what I assume is also the barrel of a gun. “Shut the fuck up!”
               See? Boring, predictable, run-of-the-mill flunkies. These couyons ain’t never gon’ make it past mid-tier bodyguard material.
               And those alarms are still screaming.  Ain’t some asshole gon’ shut it off already?  It’s givin’ me a headache.
               Whatever. I do as I’m told and shut the fuck up. Mostly because I’m busy scanning the décor of this corridor we appear to be walking down.  The walls are lined with paintings, a mess of eras and styles that could tell anyone with an ounce of taste that whoever’s collecting this shit has none.  Taste, that is.  All it tells me is that this guy has cash, and he don’t mind throwin’ it ’round.  We walk past a Cezanne, and I grimace.
               Hang on in there, li’l guy, I say to myself as we sweep right by it. One o’these days I’m gonna free you.  Soon.
               Cos let’s face it.
               You think I’m gonna leave a Cezanne to rot in Cain Marko’s fuckin’ playboy mansion when it could be on my wall?
               I think not.
               We get to the end of the corridor and, thankfully, as soon as we do, someone finally finds the off switch to the alarms. My lovely escorts throw open the burnished oak doors that I can only assume lead to Marko’s private hidey-hole; and before I have a chance to admire the woodwork, I’m being pushed inside in yet another unnecessary show of who’s boss.  I stumble a little over the threshold, and there he is.  Cain Marko, kingpin of London town.  A big, ugly, concrete slab of a man with a mat of red hair and a jaw like a foot.  He’s sitting on a burgundy-red velvet sofa that looks to be late Victorian.  Possibly a Chippendale? Something to research later.  True to form, he has a girl on each knee.
               Crimes bosses.  I toldja so.  Predictably borin’.  Boringly predictable.
               “Well, well,” Marko greets me with a menacing grimace and a Cockney rasp. “Robert Lord.  Your reputation precedes you.  Finally, we get to meet face ta face.”
               It’s at that point that Jake decides to kick in, a harassed voice in my earpiece, hissing: “Remy? Remy, where the fuck are you? Is everything okay?”
               I jerk my head to one side and Jake’s panicked questioning cuts out.
               “Yeah,” I address the man on the sofa. “Coulda been under better circumstances, though. Don’t much care for bein’ kicked around and chained up.” I clink the restraints at my wrists and ankles meaningfully. “Unless, o’ course, it’s consensual and there’s a woman involved.”
               An ugly grin crosses Marko’s face.  He shifts a little and pats each girl on the ass; they get the message and get to their feet, tottering out on stilettos that take a certain art to walk in – neither of them have it.
               “Well,” Marko says with mock disappointment as he, too, gets to his feet. “If ya wanted to meet under better circumstances, you coulda made a less shitty attempt to rob me, Mr. Lord.  I’d heard you were supposed to be some thief extraordinaire, but you ask me? You, breakin’ into my safe? That was pretty fuckin’ amateurish.”
               “Hey,” I banter back good-naturedly as I watch him walk over to the bar and pour himself a drink. “I got through most of your li’l traps jes’ fine, mon ami.  You wanna talk amateurish, let’s talk ‘bout your alarms. They’re more fuckin’ painful than Tante Mattie boxin’ me onna ears.  And it takes too long to shut ‘em off.  Either that, or your flunkies are too stupid to figure out how.”
               Marko, who’d looked half-amused up to this point, lets his mouth drop into a disdainful sneer.
               “Y’know somethin’, yank?” he growls at me, turning back from the bar. “You talk too fuckin’ much.”
               I raise a wounded eyebrow at him.
               “Yank? Hey, now you’re just insultin’ me.”
               “Oh really?” He laughs; and I take back the comment about his alarm system. This is worse. “Mr. Lord, insults are gonna be the least of your problems tonight. No one steals from Cain Marko and gets to just walk out again. You picked the wrong house to rob, mate.  This is one job you ain’t walkin’ out of.”
               He lifts his chin slightly and calls out:
               “Klein?!”
               There’s no answer, and he gives an irate little pause, looks over his shoulder and says again:
               “Klein?! Where the fuck are you?”
               “I’m here,” a woman’s voice replies from a darkened corner, her presence so unexpected it even causes me to jump.
               “Fuck me, woman,” Marko rasps at her. “How long you been standin’ there?”
               The woman says nothing, simply stepping out from her corner.  I realise there’s a door there.  It’s impossible to say whether she’d just walked through, or whether she’d been there all along.  Marko ain’t big on lighting.  Which is a shame, ‘cos Klein is a woman to be looked at.  Mile long legs and a figure to get all wrapped up in.  Brunette hair scraped back into a bun that begs to be loosened. A glance like wildfire.
               “Sorry,” she says with a small twist of humour, all delivered in a perfectly delicious and proper English accent.  I feel some sorta expression begin to form on my face; an appreciative little smile begins to shift round my lips.
               Forget pretty girls tottering around in sexy stilettos they can’t walk in.  This is a woman.
               She glances over at me, then back at her boss with an expectant expression.
               “This shit thief stole me old lady’s engagement ring.” He takes a cellphone out his back pocket and stares at it. “Lesse how fast you can find it for me.”
               Klein don’t waste time mincing words.  Unlike the two couyons behind me, she’s calm, quiet, efficient.  She marches on up with a roll of the hips that’s entirely unconscious.  When she’s finally in front of me, I catch a whiff of her perfume – a barely-there scent that’s not quite fruity and not quite flowery.
               I cock my head to one side and hitch her a smile.
               She doesn’t take the bait.  Her expression is composed as she sizes me up, wondering where to start.  It’s as if she hasn’t even noticed my smile at all.
           “Be gentle, chere,” I quip.
              That’s when she raises her eyes and gives me a look – part disinterested, part unimpressed. Her facade is almost frosty, but it don’t fool me. Beneath the cargo pants and the bomber jacket and the unadorned face, there’s a something to this woman. It’s in the sway of her hips and the sensuousness of her scent. It’s in a whole lot more besides.
              She frisks me in all the usual places, and, Goddamn, her hands alone are enough to set me on fire. Her movements are precise, clinical... yet as insinuating as the touch of a lover.
              Did I mention yet I haven't had sex in 8 fucking weeks?
              She gets on her knees and runs her palms down my legs, and it’s almost more than I can take.
              “While you’re down there, chere...” I can’t help but say; and she pauses, looks up at me with steely eyes and says... Nothing.
              Her gaze fixes on my fly like it’s the only option left, and now we’re talkin’.
              She holds eye contact as she raises both hands, and thumbs open the button of my pants. Her look is impassive; but there’s an undercurrent there, a something that’s signalling to me loud and clear. She unzips my fly slow as a strip tease, and that’s when the shadow of a smile flickers across her face – a brief split second of something more, something to work with.
              Jesus Christ, I’m holding my breath.
              She knows what I’m thinking. She rises to full height and this time she doesn’t bother to hide the smile. She knows exactly what she’s doing to me.
              “Thought you were s’pposed t’be lookin’ for contraband, p’tite,” I can't help but drawl. The comment wipes the smile from her lips and her gaze drops. She yanks open my fly and within a few short seconds she’s found the fob pocket hidden inside the waistband of my pants. Another split second later and she’s found the ring.
              She turns and flashes it triumphantly at Marko.
              “You made record time, Klein,” he observes approvingly, glancing up from his phone. “Twelve seconds. I’m impressed.”
              Twelve seconds? I swear it coulda been a lifetime...
              She throws the ring to her boss and I watch on, with a wistful sense of loss, as it arcs across the room and into his hand. Oh well. Next time, maybe.
              “If you’re done, chere,” I pipe up behind her, “mebbe you could zip me up again? O’ course, if you ain’t, we can always take dis somewhere a li’l more private... ...”
              I hadn’t exactly been expecting an answer, so I’m doubly taken off guard when she whips round and socks me hard with a fist to the face.
              I totter a bit, tasting blood and seeing stars.
              Damn, this woman packs a punch!
              In the background, Marko’s laughing raucously.
              “Looks like you chose the wrong woman t’ try and charm, yank.”
              Seriously? Enough with the ‘yank’ thing already!
              I grit my teeth and scowl as he continues:
              “Zip ’im up, Klein. I can afford to be charitable to trespassers. I think we can let him leave here with his dignity, if not his life. He has taste after all. Me old ma’s engagement ring,” and he grins sardonically over at me, “is my favourite piece outta my entire collection.”
              Klein obediently turns around and zips me up with more force than necessary. No more smiles and subtle flirtation. She doesn’t even look at me.
              “Sentimental value,” Marko is saying, turning the ring between thumb and forefinger as he approaches me. “That’s what this ring has, Mr. Lord. Me old ma woulda been turnin’ in her grave if I lost it. Specially to some shitty low-feeder like you.”
              I lick the blood from my lip slowly. Low-feeder, huh? This guy is really throwing out them punches tonight.
              “Yeah, I getcha,” I retort with a sarcastic grin. “Momma woulda slapped ya t’ kingdom come if you ever messed wit’ her jewellery. Beat you wit’ a belt, prob’ly, told ya you were a good f’nothin’ piece o’ shit, I’m willin’ t’bet. Sure, I can read a mommy complex a mile away, homme, and you got it bad.”
              I dunno what’s gotten inta me tonight. Or maybe I do. Frustration is a thing and a half. I'm fuckin’ wired, and I can’t stop running my damn mouth off. I ain’t usually this lippy. Honestly.
              Anyways, I’m steeling myself for a beating from my End-of-Level-Boss, but surprisingly he don’t take the bait. Judging from his get-up, he’s ready for a night out, and he don’t want my blood soiling his purple Savile Row suit. Which is good for me, ‘cos the rings on his fingers look like they could double up for some pretty nasty knuckle dusters.
              “I take it back,” he sneers down his nose at me. “This bloody yank don’t deserve jack.”
              He sweeps away and grabs his jacket.
              “You’ve been lookin’ t’prove yerself, ain’t’cha, Klein,” he throws over his shoulder at the woman still standing beside me. “Take care of Mr. Lord for me, and consider yerself one of the gang.” He walks over to a side table, pulls open a draw and takes out a gun. When he throws it to her, she catches it like she doesn’t even have to think about it. “Just make sure you keep some suitably gory keepsake for me to remember ’im by. I’m thinkin’ his teeth. He’s got them pearly whites you can only get in ’Murica. It'll remind me of ’is charmin’ smile.”
              He laughs to himself, throws the ring up in the air, catches it, and deposits it into his pocket.
              “Sorry, Mr. Lord,” he addresses me, “but I have places to go and people to kill.  Don’t worry. Klein’ll entertain you in the playpen.” He waves absently at a door to the right. “I’m sure she’s just itchin’ to get her hands on you.”
              He chuckles and heads for the door, followed by one of his henchmen, leaving with a final, gleeful, “So long!”
              The door bangs shut and now it’s just me, Klein, and Henchman #1.
              Wise strategy on Marko’s part, if Ms. Klein is basically untried and untested.  I might break her little heart, and Henchman #1 might have to put me down instead.
              I suppress a laugh at the thought.
              Klein says nothing. She turns abruptly and sticks the barrel of the gun into the small of my back.
              “Move,” she says.  Her voice is deadpan – nothing to work with.
              “Y’know, chere,” I venture conversationally, as I start shuffling over to the door, “I could speed up some if you’d jes’ untie these chains… Then we could get t’ playtime in the playpen a whole lot faster…”
              “Hey, shut up will ya!” Henchmen #1 barks at me, punctuated by a sharp poke in the back by Klein’s gun. All right, all right, already. I get the message.  They hustle me up to the door and next thing I know, I’m being shoved inside.  Henchman #1 shuts the door behind me and I hear the locks thunk shut.  Now it’s just me, and Klein.
              It turns out the playpen could give H. H. Holmes’ hotel of horrors a run for its money. It’s a pokey little room, and someone’s done gone and painted the walls in a nice shade of red and crusty brown. Blood, gore and brain matter.  The whole place stinks of death.  Merde. The light-hearted mood I’ve managed to maintain so far immediately takes a dive.
              “I take it housekeepin’ don't come round often,” I quip in an undertone – hardly as insolent as it could've been, but it earns me a kick up the ass anyway.  I stagger forward under the momentum, turning to face my would-be executioner as I do so.
              She has the gun pointed at me.
              “Chere, I’d put my hands up if they weren’t tied behind my—”
              The gun fires.
              And the bullet hits the wall over my shoulder.
              The crazy femme don’t give me a moment to recover.
              In a flash she’s lowered the gun and is marching right over to me, grabbing the front of my shirt and jerking me down into a hungry kiss.
              “It’s okay,” she whispers when she sees I’m too shocked to respond. “There aren’t any cameras in here.”
              The words are barely out of her mouth and she’s kissing me again. This time I slip easily out of the chains that I’ve been working on ever since they were clapped on me, and as soon as they hit the ground, I let my palms slide up over her cheeks, pulling her closer, deeper into our kiss. Her fingers wind into my hair, tugging lightly; her body presses against mine, reminding me exactly what I’ve been without the past couple of months. I grab handfuls of her perfect ass and pull her in closer.
              God, I’d fuck her right here, right now, if we weren’t in this shithole and this wasn’t a very important job.
              We kiss until we have no air left to breathe.
              “Lord, I’ve missed ya, Remy,” she murmurs against my lips.
              “Mmm, not as much as I’ve missed you,” I answer sincerely, stealing another kiss before adding heatedly, “Eight whole weeks without you, chere... It’s enough t’ drive a man certifiably insane.”
              She laughs, soft and sexy, her fingers combing lightly through my hair as she backs up a bit and regards me.
              “Darlin’,” she murmurs with a smile, “you were the one who said no contact...”
              “Didn’t wanna risk breakin’ your cover, Anna,” I reply, bridging the slight gap between us and feathering light kisses along her jawline. “Cain Marko’s gang don’t got a real nice reputation, sweet.”
              “Pfft,” she scoffs. “I can handle myself.”
              “For sure,” I agree. “But I’d prefer it if we didn’t tank this mission ‘cos we couldn’t keep our hands offa each other.”
              She hums with vague agreement and runs her thumb across my bottom lip.
              “Sorry about the fist to the face, babe,” she apologises. “Hope I didn’t hurt you too much."
              “Peh.” I wave it off absently – I'd pretty much forgotten it already. “You do what you gotta. Speaking of...”
              But she’s already way ahead of me, rooting around in her utility belt and taking out the small mem-chip case.
              “Nice distraction, by the way,” she congratulates me wryly as she hands me the goods.
              “Didja like it?” I ask her, pocketing the small case.
              “In theory. Thought you had more style, though, Cajun. You managed to set off every alarm in the fucking building.”
              “Heh. Just wanted to make sure you had enough time to pull the heist, cherie.”
              She rolls her eyes expressively.
              “You thought it was funny pissing everyone off, admit it. And what was all that business with the fob pocket?”
              “Chere,” I answer with mock sincerity. “Eight weeks of celibacy and you think I’m gonna pass up the chance to have you feel me up? C’mon.”
              The punch she lands on my bicep is enough to hurt.
              “You are such a troll!” she shoots at me with more affection than ire, I’m happy to say.
              “You love it,” I mutter, grabbing her helplessly and kissing her mouth soundly. We end up wasting a few more precious seconds making out again.
              “So what we gonna do, huh?” I ask her once we break apart. “Henchman #1 is waitin’ outside, and I figure we could both take him out pretty easy...”
              “Nuh-uh,” she cuts me off with a mischievous grin. “That’ll break our cover for sure. You, sweetheart, are taking the back door out.”
              Her gaze slides over my shoulder, and when I look back, I see that the back door is actually a chute in the wall. From the amount of gore it’s covered in, it’s pretty obvious it's a disposal chute – for corpses.
              “You have got to be fuckin’ kiddin’ me, p’tite,” I groan under my breath.
              “Think of it as payback for kicking me down that garbage chute back at the Plaza hotel,” she banters back lightly, clearly enjoying this.
              “Anna, after this, we’re even and then some,” I say dolefully.
              “Yup,” she replies cheerfully. She swoops in for another quick kiss before saying: “I’ll be waiting for you by the East gate in about 30. Got some stuff to finish up here, otherwise they’ll get suspicious.”
              “All right.” My response is half-hearted. I ain’t relishing goin’ down that chute, that’s for sure. Anna, however, is completely indifferent to my plight. She’s almost at the door already when I stop her.
              “Uhh… Anna?”
              She stops, turns.
              “What?”
              I point down at my chained-up ankles.
              “Li’l help, please?”
               She gives a theatrical sigh; but she comes back anyway, dropping to her knees and undoing the chains round my ankles.
              “I’m pretty sure you could do this yourself faster than I ever could, Cajun,” she says pointedly, to which I shrug and reply:
              “Sure. But havin’ you down on your knees in front of me brings back all sorts of happy mem’ries I’ve been denied the past couple of months.”
              The chains clatter to the floor and she quirks an unimpressed look at me.
              “Jesus. You’re puttin’ out more pheromones than a skunk puts out spray.”
              “Chere, I been insulted ’nuff today, bein’ called a ‘yank’ an’ all. You reckon you could find an analogy a little more flatterin’ than a skunk?”
              She gets to her feet and plants her hands on her hips.
              “Swamp boy, there ain’t enough analogies in the world for the dirty things I wanna call you right now,” she declares in her gorgeously titillating and rarely-bestowed native Mississippi accent.
              “Oooh,” I banter back. “Dirty, huh? Beb, when I get you home tonight, you can call me all the dirty things under the sun. I can’t wait.”
              She chooses to ignore the statement, walking over to the chute instead and pulling it open. When she looks back at me, she’s smiling sweetly.
              “Sugar, when we get home tonight, the first thing you’re gonna do is take a shower. Cos once you’ve gone down this here chute, you’re gonna be dirty as hell, and not in a good way.”
              Trust her to kill the mood. I peer down the hole gingerly. The miasma wafting up from down below is worse than any skunk’s.
              “Chere, you wanna rethink this? Only I get the feelin’ one shower ain’t gon’ be enough t’ get the stench out...”
              “Quit being such a baby!” She’s smiling way too hard for my liking at this point. “The sooner you get this over with, the sooner we can wrap up this job.”
              I step reluctantly up to the edge of the hole, and she leans in over my shoulder, murmurs in my ear: “And the sooner I can get my hands on you again.” She lets that suggestion linger. And, Dieu, does it linger.
              “Now buckle up and hold onto the railings,” she warns me.
              “What railings?” I manage to get out, before her boot heel connects with my ass, and I’m suddenly tumbling through the filth and mire down, down into the depths of the Marko mansion.
-oOo-
[Chapter 2 now here!]
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a-pair-of-iris · 6 years
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Calurosa navidad. Combo 3
Me atrasé!! (como siempre) pero bueno, aún no se acaba el año!
Promp 5: our families have been having an unspoken christmas lights competition since you moved here and now I’ve finally meet my rival > Pedro y Alfred. Palabras: 1548
Promp 6: Someone try to make christmas cookies. Someone fails to make christmas cookies > La gran colombia, para tener algo de amor fraternal. Palabras: 1292
Estoy mirando las luces de diciembre.
La familia Jones había terminado viviendo en el barrio latino de la ciudad por puro capricho del destino. Y pura torpeza del padre.
Por algo se hacía reconocimiento del terreno.
Vivir en el barrio latino plus otras familias multiculturales (Alfred había contado unas dos casas italianas, tres chinas y una musulmana), era todo lo que se podía esperar de la globalización.  Con Matthew ya habían probado platillos de cuatro continentes distintos, aprendido infinitas versiones de las mismas canciones, y dominado el nivel intermedio de español para que sus vecinos no los dejaran fuera de los planes de juego. Otra cosa interesante eran los días de fiesta.
Por mucho que los Jones, los Brown del siguiente pasaje, los Jackson y las Carter se esforzaran en Halloween con sus casas del terror y los zombies, siempre eran las casas mexicanas las que atraían al mayor número de personas. Además, al ser mayoría podían tomar casi toda la calle para poner sus decoraciones. Así que esa competencia la ganaban ellos.
El 4 de Julio para los vecinos era más de “donde fuerais haced lo que vierais”. Según su madre esa no era una competencia bien ganada.
Pero en lo que sí se enorgullecían sus padres de llamarse los “ganadores” era para la época de navidad. Un año fueron la docena de esferas de nieve que adornaban el techo. Al otro parecía que la casa estaba construida totalmente con luces. Y así y así desde que Alfred recordaba vivir ahí.
Al menos él y Matty disfrutaban cantarle villancicos a todos los que se pasaban a mirar.
Pero todo cambió cuando la nación del fueg-
Todo cambió cuando llegaron nuevos vecinos, y la indiscutida racha ganadora de los Jones se perdió.
La primera navidad con los nuevos vecinos, su padre instaló en el techo un Santa que saludaba ¡Jo jo jo, feliz navidad!. Los vecinos tenían el trineo completo con los ocho renos. El segundo año, los Jones construyeron cuatro casitas para duendes, los vecinos tenían la villa completa en el jardín.
Aquel era el tercer año y su madre estaba como loca de tienda en tienda, buscando nuevas ideas recuperar el honor de la familia.
- This is war, Alfred, and we had already lost two battles… (Esto es una guerra, Alfred, y ya hemos perdido dos batallas…) -Decía mientras revisaba por segunda vez las luces que estaban guardadas en las cajas del garaje. No vaya a ser que por una bombilla se arruinara toda la secuencia.
Alfred de verdad pensaba que necesitaban una nueva estrategia. Por eso arrastró a Mathew con él junto a un par de binoculares detrás de unos arbustos, justo frente a la casa de sus vecinos. Estaba tratando de enfocar dentro de la casa, esperando algo de movimiento detrás de las cortinas. O que abrieran la puerta de su garaje para husmear qué decían las cajas.
- I think this is illegal, Al… (Me parece que esto es ilegal, Al…) -Murmuró su hermano, sentado a su lado con los binoculares colgando de su cuello y abrazando sus rodillas.
- Course not! We’re… ah, playing spy, right in front of their house. (¡Claro que no! Estamos… ah, jugando al espía, justo frente a su casa.)
- Al…
- Hey! Do you want a happy mom or not? Help me out here! (¡Oye! ¿Quieres una mamá feliz o no? Ayúdame aquí)
Matthew terminó por aburrirse luego de dos horas sin que nada pasara, y bajo la mirada traicionada de su hermano se marchó de regreso a casa.
- I’ll bring you a soda (Te traeré una soda) -Pasaron quince minutos y Alfred todavía no veía esa soda.
Sintiéndose valiente, salió de su escondite y caminó sigilosamente hacia la casa, en cuanto llegó se pegó a las paredes, como si hubiera cámaras de las que esconderse. Miró la puerta del garaje, tocó las orillas y trató de ver a través de la ranura inferior, pero nada.
- Hum…
- ¡Guauf!
Dio un salto y con el corazón acelerado miró alrededor.
- ¡Guauf!
Finalmente miró hacia abajo, y junto a sus pies vio al chihuahua más chico y con los ojos más grandes que había visto, rugiendo suavemente y temblando con todo el cuerpo. Era tan feo que hasta le parecía lindo.
- ¡Awww! -Se agachó para tocarlo, pero el perrito le mostró los dientes y comenzó a rugir con más fuerza. Alfred comenzó a ponerse nervioso- Easy, easy…
- ¡Guau guau guau guau! -La pequeña bestia fue a atacar sus pies y tobillos. Alfred tuvo el repentino instinto de patear al perro, pero se controló a último minuto e hizo lo segundo en lo que pudo pensar. Corrió.
El chihuahua corrió detrás de él, enterrando los dientes sobre sus zapatillas, y Alfred huyó a tropezones alrededor de gran parte de la calle, sacudiéndose al perro cada vez que este le enterraba sus dientecitos. Al final, lo mejor que pudo hacer fue subirse a un árbol, donde pasó casi diez minutos mirando hacia el suelo donde el perro seguía ladrando y temblando.
- ¡Taquito, ya párale canijo! -Un chico latino apareció en la escena, recogió al perro de un solo jalón y aunque el chihuahua no paró de temblar, al menos paró de ladrar.
- Thank god! -Exclamó Alfred, sin soltarse aún de la rama en la que estaba.
- No, Pedro -El moreno le sonrió y aunque seguía con el perro en brazos, extendió una mano hacia Alfred, quien seguía arrimado al árbol. Tratando de devolverle el gesto al chico, se fue de bruces al piso.
- ¡Guauf!
- ¡Híjole! ¿Estás bien?
- ¡Hurts, hurts, hurts…! (¡Duele, duele, duele…!)
Pedro lo ayudó a sentarse contra el tronco y tuvo la gentileza de hablar sin parar hasta que la rodilla dejó de retumbarle.
- Taquito es un asesino, no te culpo por elegir escapar -Comentó el otro niño, acariciando al perro en su regazo. Por fin el animal había apartado sus ojos saltones de Alfred, ahora solo miraba una mosquita que volaba alrededor de su cabeza.
- No quería que mordiera mis zapatos -Comentó el rubio, tratando de no verse tan avergonzado. El acento de anglo no se le quitaba a Alfred ni con todos los años que había vivido rodeado de latinos, pero al menos ya dominaba eso de formar frases con sentido.
-Of course -La cara que Pedro le puso mostraba que el niño sabía que esa no era la verdad del asunto, pero lo dejó quedarse con su orgullo intacto.
Peter le estaba agradando bastante, no tanto así su perro.
En cuanto se levantaron del pasto, Pedro dejó a Tacos en el suelo, y luego de olisquearle la base de los pantalones por tres segundos, el chihuahua perdió el interés en Alfred y puso su atención en olfatear el piso.
- ¿No quieres una bandita para tu rodilla? Mi casa está justo al frente -Preguntó el moreno, mirando con interés el pantalón todo rasgado y oscurecido del rubio.
-No se preocupe, mi casa está a poco… -Alfred iba a señalar la dirección de su casa, después de todo todavía podía verla desde donde estaban, hasta que registró las palabras del chico y giró su cabeza para confirmar su sospecha. Justo frente al árbol al que se había trepado estaba el hogar de sus implícitos rivales. En aquel momento recordó que, en esos dos años, nunca se había fijado mucho en los hijos de los vecinos, por muy extraño que fuera. Regresó su mirada a Pedro y al perro con una nueva perspectiva.
Por poco y convertía su vida en un absurdo drama Shakesperiano.
- You alright?
Antes de que pudiera responderle, preferentemente con un extenso y sentido discurso el desperdicio de sus esfuerzos por destruirlos, su hermano Matthew por fin hizo su aparición con la soda.
-Sorry Al, there was nothing on the- Oh, hello! Hola, no recuerdo verte ant…- Antes de que Matty pudiera entablar una verdadera conversación con Peter, tomó a su hermano del brazo y comenzó a arrástralo de vuelta a la casa, sin darle la espalda a su nuevo contendiente.
-This isn’t over, you hear me?! Next time I’ll be prepared! (¡¿Esto no se ha acabado, me oyes?! ¡La próxima vez estaré preparado!) -Agitó el brazo sobre su cabeza y luego apuntó a Pedro, y después a Tacos, para que no creyeran que había olvidado a la bestia.
-Al, what’re you talking ‘bout? (¿Al, qué estás diciendo?)
-Better your house watch his back! (¡Es mejor que tu casa se cuide la espalda!)
-Alfred!
Los gritos de los hermanos Jones se perdieron una vez cerraron la puerta de su casa. Pedro guardó silencio por mucho, mucho tiempo, tratando de comprender qué fue lo que sucedió.
- ¿Qué pasó? -Su hermana, una morena igual que él, por fin se acercó ahora que el niño rubio se había marchado, un tanto intrigada por la cara consternada de su hermano y los gritos sin sentido del otro chico. Traía unos binoculares colgando del cuello y un gorro con diseño de camuflaje.
-Ah… ¿No tengo idea? –Le dio un vistazo a su hermana y por fin notó su aspecto tan extraño- ¿Y tú qué te traes con esa ropa?
-Ya recopilé la información que mamá quería, tampoco nos ganarán este año esos gringos.
Niña, claro que me gustan esas galletas.
 Catalina no dejó que su mamá comprara la bolsa de galletas, por mucho que María chillara que las quería. Según la hija mayor, ella iba a hornearlas para sus hermanitos, hasta había apartado una receta de todas las que encontró en internet. Su madre al final le hizo el favor de creer en su capacidad culinaria.
Catalina comenzó a sacar todo lo que necesitaba de los estantes, que ahora que tenía catorce alcanzaba sin mucha dificultad. María y Francisco fueron a espiarla mientras trataba de seguir las indicaciones del blog de cocina.
- ¡María! ¡Deja de soplar la harina! -Vio la sonrisa traviesa de su hermanita, y solo alcanzó a cerrar los ojos antes de que la niña soplara sobre su mano, la harina que descansaba en su palma terminó en las pestañas de Catalina- …menos galletas para ti, bestia.
- Ji ji ji…
- ¡Más chocolate! -El grito emocionado de Francisco llamó su atención. Agarró a tientas uno de los paños de cocina para limpiarse la cara y en cuanto pudo ver, notó al niño de seis añadiendo otra taza de polvo de cacao a la mezcla.
- ¡Fran, NO!
Tomó a su hermanito y lo alzó en el aire. El resto del chocolate cayó al piso y Catalina se estremeció al imaginarse lo que diría su madre.
- ¡Más chocolate! -Volvió a gritar Francisco mientras sacudía los pies.
- No, no, no, suficiente con eso -Tomó todas las bolsas de chocolate y las guardó en el estante más alto que pudo alcanzar.
- Ohhh…
- ¡A mezclar! -María aprovecho que su hermana estaba lejos y vació la harina en el bowl de los huevos, y una nube blanca la cubrió entera- ¡Cof! ¡Cof!
-¡María! ¡Argh!
Amaba a sus hermanos, pero a veces…
Justo cuando estaban por superar su paciencia, apareció la cabeza de Rodrigo asomándose por la puerta.
-¿Y ahora qué hicieron?
- ¡Llévatelos! -Tomó a Francisco en brazos y pescó a María antes de que pudiera poner mano en la masa. Francisco se fue feliz a los brazos de Rodrigo, porque Rodri al igual que Cata hacía muy bien de avión. María se quejó un poco más al ser expulsada de la cocina, pero con la promesa de la primera elección de Netflix la convencieron.
Escuchó el inicio de una de las películas de Disney antes de concentrarse en armar la masa. En cuanto metió las manos sintió la mantequilla embarrándole los dedos, habría sido buena idea cortarse un poco más las uñas. Estuvo moviendo y apretando la masa por unos treinta minutos, quedó con los brazos acalambrados pero al menos terminó viéndose parecida a la imagen en internet.
Como no estaba tan enojada después de todo, dejó que María cortara un par de galletas con el molde de campanas. Rodrigo se adueñó del molde de pino, y Francisco quiso usar el de estrella, así que Catalina quedó haciendo las personitas.
Con cuatro pares de manos se podría pensar que terminarían en un dos por tres, pero esa no es una realidad con tres hermanos pequeños. A María le gustaba hacer figuras con la masa sobrante, y al verla Francisco quiso hacer lo mismo. Rodrigo era un cero a la izquierda con un uslero en la mano, así que el trabajo de estirar la masa era lento, porque Cata no era… experta, en eso de cocinar.
-¡Deja de comerte todo! -Le dio una palmada en la cabeza a Rodrigo, cuando lo pilló comiendo un poco de masa, otra vez.
-Es que tengo hambreee…
Fue largo y tedioso terminar las galletas, pero finalmente pudo prender el horno y meter dos bandejas llenas de galletas.
-No te vas a quedar frente al horno hasta que salgan, ¿Verdad? -Le preguntó Rodrigo con una ceja alzada, una vez que los dos más pequeños se aburrieron de esperar en la cocina y volvieron a la sala a ver películas.
-Ah… -Eso era precisamente lo que pensaba hacer, y la silla que estaba arrastrando hasta el horno la delataba.
-¡Cata!
-Pero… ¿Y si se queman y no estoy aquí? ¿Y si…?
-Guarda esa intensidad para tus hijos, pon el cronómetro y aléjate de ese horno.
En sí no era mal consejo, pero para eso primero hay que conocer el horno, y la masa… y en fin, tener la experiencia y suerte de tu lado. Por su falta de experiencia Catalina no se percató que las bandejas estaban muy bajas, y tampoco sabía que el horno se calentaba más en ciertas partes, o que era mejor bajarle la llama a mitad del tiempo. Y para su mala suerte el cronómetro nunca sonó y siguió viendo la película, ignorando que sus creaciones ardían como brasas.
Hasta que sintieron el olor.
-Parece que hay un incendio –Comentó María, sin despegar los ojos de la pantalla.
-¿Ah?
-Huele a quemado…
Catalina le dio vueltas a la idea por un instante, pero finalmente reaccionó, se levantó de un salto del sillón y corrió a la cocina. Salió una nube de humo del interior en cuanto abrió la puerta del horno, y fue tosiendo a la ventana para disiparlo. Al sacar la bandeja con las galletas se confirmó lo que todos sospechaban, más que galletas parecía que quisieron hornear carbón.
-Ohh… -Suspiró Francisco mirando las figuras rostizadas. María, con una cuchara de palo tomada de los cajones, golpeó un par de ellas a ver si podía partirlas. Estaban duras como madera.
-…
Catalina repasó las miradas decepcionadas de sus hermanitos y sintió los ojos humedecerse. Con pesar tomó las dos bandejas y tiró a la basura todas las galletas. Francisco, María y Rodrigo guardaron silencio mientras la mayor terminaba de ordenar la cocina.
-Vuelvan a ver películas, después voy a comprar un par de bolsas con galletas… -La voz temblorosa de su hermana hizo que el resto intercambiara miradas preocupadas, hasta que Rodrigo se acercó a Catalina y le jaló del brazo.
-Podemos hacer más…
Su hermana sacudió la cabeza y luego de colgar su delantal, se excusó y subió rápido a su habitación. Los tres más pequeños volvieron a mirarse, pero esta vez con aire determinado.
Catalina estuvo alrededor de una media hora sintiendo pena por ella misma y culpándose de ser una pésima excusa de hermana mayor. Estaba sacando sus audífonos del cajón con el objetivo de escuchar algunas canciones deprimentes cuando llamaron a su puerta.
-¿Cata? Fran y María se están tornando difíciles, y ah… ¿Ayuda?
Dio un suspiro cansado, pero igualmente se levantó. Rodrigo la recibió en la puerta, y sus instintos de hermana mayor le dijeron que algo se traía el chico entre manos por cómo se mecía de un lado a otro. Alzó una ceja pero no dijo nada.
- ¡A ver caramba! ¿Qué están haciendo ahora? –Bajó la escalera rápidamente y se cruzó de brazos frente a los dos niños. Ambos la miraban con ojitos grandes y sonrisas en el rostro. Sin abrir la boca señalaron hacia su espalda, hacia la escalera y donde todavía estaba Rodrigo. Con cautela se dio vuelta y quedó tiesa cuando vio lo que adornaba la escalera.
Con plasticina, glitter y un montón de cosas más sus tres hermanos habían adornado un puñado de sus rostizadas galletas y las colgaron como adornos de navidad en la escalera. Nuevamente sintió sus ojos humedecerse.
- ¡Ay! –Exclamó, y se pasó las manos por los ojos antes de que cayera algo. Francisco fue el primero en colgarse de su cintura, le siguió María y luego Rodrigo.
- Ahora les compro una bolsa a cada uno.
-¡Siiii!
Al llegar sus padres se extrañaron por las nuevas decoraciones, pero no tuvieron el valor de quitarlas ni preocuparse por las hormigas frente a las sonrisas orgullosas de sus hijos.
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