moodswing whiskey / aodhán & ignacio. * blitz
Jun 6, 2024 16:13:27 GMT -5
Post by andromache s. ⚔️ [d1b] sucy on Jun 6, 2024 16:13:27 GMT -5
As their meeting draws to a close, Aodhán looks out at all the attendees. Karl, bright and heating up the room by presence alone. Little Heidi Verbrecher, who worried him more every passing day. A handful of his coworkers from pediatrics. Familiar faces from across Six, ones he can't quite place. There's also ones that he can -- former patients, all grown up. He catches one of them in his gaze. Ignacio? Is that his name? Aodhán's only about halfway sure, which is better than most things these days.
It hadn't been him on a stretcher that day. A sibling, Aodhán thought. It hadn't been an unusual case in itself, just a fracture. Fionn did something similar to each of his limbs in the next handful of years, and Aodhán had to set those too. What was unusual was the kid's method of payment: cigars that he left in his mailbox. His wife saw him drop them off from the kitchen window. She was still angry with him, because he kept taking on cases pro bono, sometimes paying out of his (their) own pocket. But she softened up after that. They didn't fight again for nearly three weeks. A new record.
How long has it been? Twelve years now? Maybe less, maybe more. He can't quite remember. Either way, Aodhán still has most of those cigars in his desk drawer. Fionn was only small back then, and all of those years had long since blended together. Not much in his life worthy of breaking out a cigar had happened. He usually only smoked cigarettes he rolled himself and kept tucked behind his ear when he was doing paperwork. He hadn't even looked in the box for years, but if memory served, there should only be one missing. He smoked one when his daughter was born. He'd gotten a verbal lashing for it too.
Aodhán sucks in a breath, watches the congregation filing out. He doesn't want to go back to his house yet. It's no home, not even a place he can relax at. It's a formality, an address. There's only one place for him now: the bottom of a glass, next door to a companion. Drinking alone is an even lonelier feeling than an empty bed.
"Ignacio?" Aodhán saunters up to him, hands in his big coat pockets. He slips one of them out, holds it out as if to be shaken, then changes his mind. He smacks Ignacio on the arm instead, a brotherly quarter hug. "I might sound crazy, but do you recognise me? There's some cigars in my office that I ought to thank you for."