Armand could feel the extra energy as he came through the carriageway into the back garden. Not completely sure what it was, only that he could sense them moving in the flat, and there was something sweet and playful and innocent infused in it, thrumming beneath the presence itself. Lestat was home, he could feel that as well, and Louis. Their energies were different from each other, each palpable and distinct. Lestat felt bold and loud and vivid, Louis soft and sweet and comforting. Lestat was a popping champagne bottle, the splatter of paint on a Pollock canvas, a firework in the night sky. Louis was a gentle hand on your back, reassuring whisper in your ear, the slow and seductive pull of dawn.
Iām here, he told them as he ascended the stairs. He wondered if he should let himself inside, or knock, but instead put his hands in his pockets and waited.
But then Lestatās face was in the window, his eyes glittery and excited, skin darkened by the recent trip to the sun. The door opened on its own, Lestatās doing, and it was instantly obvious that heād chosen to use his mind because his hands were full.
Before he could speak, Lestat extended one arm out, in his hand a single German Shepherd puppy. Three others wiggled against his chest and he cooed in French at them. āHere,ā he said, and thrust the one into Armandās chest. Armand grabbed it instinctively, somewhat bewildered but immediately charmed by the warmth and purity radiating from the creature. āI named this one Armand.ā
The spike of anger and reflexive venomous response that usually came out in these moments were quelled by the gentle life in his hands, and he looked away from Lestat to stare at it. It was kicking its legs and squirming but he gave it a little scratch behind its ear to calm it down. It stopped moving and looked at him, eyes so shiny and black, and responded by licking his face. Armand ducked his head so that Lestat wouldnāt see his smile.
āCome inside, I want to close the door. Donāt let them out,ā Lestat said, and backed away to make space.
He saw Louis then, when he cleared the doorway, still snuggling his namesake to his chest. Sitting cross-legged on the velvet couch, Mojo curled up beside him, a solid black puppy in his hands. He was scratching its ears and smiling at it andā¦
Strange ache in his chest, because heād never seen that look on Louisās face before.
āWhere did all these puppies come from?ā he asked. Louis looked up at him as if waking from a trance, like heād been too absorbed to even notice Armand had arrived.
āTurns out Mojo is a lady,ā Lestat said. He plopped down on the floor in the center of the room and took turns giving each puppy pats on their heads. They climbed on his legs and chewed on his shirt.
He held his puppy away from his face to inspect it again. It tilted its head at him and whined, and⦠strange ache again as he realized how unusual it was, and how he was straining to remember last time heād held an animal this close. At home, in Kiev. They could never keep pets in Venice. He felt cold all over for a moment before pulling it to his chest again, feeling its warm little body settling against him and hearing the fluttery little heartbeat.
āWhat are you going to do with them?ā
Lestat shrugged and picked one up, rubbing his face against its chubby, furry belly.
āWhy donāt you give one to Daniel? Maybe you can win him back.ā
Artist VS Art meme thingy. I saw this being quite popular at this summer and IĀ jump into the bandwagon fashionably late.
Just like I pose in every photo, characters in my drawings – for the 99.8% of the time – are being presented from the ¾ point of view as well. What a educational meme.
My photo is actually in the middle of the first row.
āOh really? Do you like being food for the immortals? Iāll bet you taste as sweet as you sound, a fine port⦠and I do love to skip straight to dessertā¦
Iām not that much taller. Iām a couple inches shorter than Lestat. Maybe 5 inches taller than Armand, when heās not wearing heeled shoes, and the man owns a lot of heeled shoes.
Pros: I can make short jokes. Cons: I get punched for making short jokes.Ā