May 19th, 1891 — Macnair’s London Home
Outside of this room, Ford could entertain thoughts about what a terrible idea this was. He really did know what a terrible idea it was, too. Maybe he could have kidded himself into thinking it was fine the first week, but after the news of the engagement broke he was hard pressed to pretend anymore. He still tried. He tried to talk himself out of it mentally by reminding himself that Macnair didn't care now, and probably wouldn't start later. This was just sex, it wasn't a whole thing, and if he wanted any more proof that Macnair didn't see him as a friend or a confidante or whatever he need look no further than the fact that he'd found out the man was engaged by reading about it in the papers. Macnair was just using him as a pleasurable distraction from — whatever his deal was with Tatiana Lestrange, which was fine, honestly. Ford could do that. He could come over and enjoy himself and then he could leave and not get attached, or anything, because he knew what this was and what Macnair wanted from it. And if Macnair still said all those sweet nothings afterwards, then that was fine, because he could attribute that to pillow talk. And if Ford kept staying over afterwards even though he'd determined not to before he arrived, that was fine, too, because it wasn't like it meant anything; it was just convenient to stay and it was nice to hold someone. And if he'd stayed the night after their fight last Monday and they hadn't even gotten around to having sex and it therefore didn't seem to fit his mental template for what to expect from this whole thing, that was — weird, it was weird and Ford was decidedly Not Thinking About It. He didn't know how to square that with all of the other information he had, and he just knew that if he took that night out of its mental box and started to actually examine it, he'd start getting wrapped up in it, and then when this inevitably ended — which it would, because to Macnair it was just a pleasant distraction — it was going to hurt all the worse because Ford had let himself get caught up in a fantasy that had never really existed.
And even if he hadn't been treading carefully and pointedly not thinking about things to avoid having to deal with his feelings about those things, he still knew this was a bad idea. It was a bad idea to be fooling around with someone at all, whether or not there were feelings involved. It had already seen him distracted and irritated when he was supposed to be present for Cash, which was too important to let himself slip up on again. Ford didn’t really have the time and energy to spare on things like this, and sooner or later it might start seeping into the rest of his life even if he tried his best to contain it. Not to mention if he kept it up someone was going to notice that he was staying out suspiciously late too often. If his family started to put things together they’d suspect the worst, he thought: that he was fooling around with a girl. That would have been worse for a myriad of reasons, including the potential for pregnancy and the implication that Ford might eventually have to marry her and because it wasn’t a gentlemanly thing to do, taking advantage of a young woman for the sake of her virtue. No one in their right mind could have claimed Ford was taking advantage of Macnair, though, and obviously those other concerns were moot. The worst thing that could be said of this was that it was frivolous in a way that didn’t suit Ford’s role in life. This was the sort of fun men could have when they had all the time and money in the world, and no real responsibilities to speak of — it wasn’t really for him, and he knew that by continuing to answer Macnair’s letters he was pretending to a lifestyle he didn’t really own. He knew it couldn’t last, and knew objectively that he should probably call it off sooner rather than later. (Still: he didn’t feel half so guilty as he would have if he had been getting into trouble with a woman.)
And he still hadn't really put much thought into what this looked like in the future, or if it existed in the future at all. Macnair was going to be married sooner or later, and Ford hadn't figured out whether or not he was planning to keep seeing him, much less whether that was logistically feasible. It changed the whole balance of things, the risk/reward ratio on this thing that had been a stupid risk in the first place, and he hadn't figured out what to do about it. That whole conversation he'd had on Monday night was in the same mental box as everything that had followed, with kissing and cuddling even without the assumption of sex, and taking it out to determine how he felt about it would mean reckoning with all the rest of it too, which — he couldn't. Which meant that he didn't know what was going to happen with this, and he never knew when he went through the floo to Macnair's London house if it might be for the last time, which was as good a reason as any not to go anymore.
When he was here, though, Ford didn’t have time to think about any of that. From the moment he arrived up through their climaxes the only thing on his mind was Macnair’s pleasure. In the aftermath it was something else entirely. The urgency was gone, replaced with a cozy, muddled feeling in his brain that he very intentionally tried not to identify, but his thoughts were no less full than they were when he arrived. Instead of concentrating on what he could do for Macnair, however, he was focusing on Macnair himself. Things like watching the way the other man’s chest rose and fell with his breathing, and allowing his fingertips to trace over the curves of his torso, could captivate him for minutes. This was what he was doing, basking in the afterglow and drinking in the sights and sounds and feeling of Macnair’s bare chest and his slow breathing, doing all of these things without thinking about the fact that he was doing them, very carefully avoiding that it was dangerous to be doing these things, when he first saw the ghost.
He floated through the wall just on one side of the headboard, emerging in Ford’s field of vision a mere three or four feet away. At first Ford wasn’t sure what he was seeing, despite how often he worked with spirits — he had not particularly expected to see one here — and he blinked rapidly before realizing that shit, that was an actual ghost in the room with them, and shit, Ford was still naked. With a noise of surprise and alarm, he scrambled for the edge of the nearest sheet to try and cover himself, while the ghost, entirely unimpressed, drifted out through the opposite wall.
And even if he hadn't been treading carefully and pointedly not thinking about things to avoid having to deal with his feelings about those things, he still knew this was a bad idea. It was a bad idea to be fooling around with someone at all, whether or not there were feelings involved. It had already seen him distracted and irritated when he was supposed to be present for Cash, which was too important to let himself slip up on again. Ford didn’t really have the time and energy to spare on things like this, and sooner or later it might start seeping into the rest of his life even if he tried his best to contain it. Not to mention if he kept it up someone was going to notice that he was staying out suspiciously late too often. If his family started to put things together they’d suspect the worst, he thought: that he was fooling around with a girl. That would have been worse for a myriad of reasons, including the potential for pregnancy and the implication that Ford might eventually have to marry her and because it wasn’t a gentlemanly thing to do, taking advantage of a young woman for the sake of her virtue. No one in their right mind could have claimed Ford was taking advantage of Macnair, though, and obviously those other concerns were moot. The worst thing that could be said of this was that it was frivolous in a way that didn’t suit Ford’s role in life. This was the sort of fun men could have when they had all the time and money in the world, and no real responsibilities to speak of — it wasn’t really for him, and he knew that by continuing to answer Macnair’s letters he was pretending to a lifestyle he didn’t really own. He knew it couldn’t last, and knew objectively that he should probably call it off sooner rather than later. (Still: he didn’t feel half so guilty as he would have if he had been getting into trouble with a woman.)
And he still hadn't really put much thought into what this looked like in the future, or if it existed in the future at all. Macnair was going to be married sooner or later, and Ford hadn't figured out whether or not he was planning to keep seeing him, much less whether that was logistically feasible. It changed the whole balance of things, the risk/reward ratio on this thing that had been a stupid risk in the first place, and he hadn't figured out what to do about it. That whole conversation he'd had on Monday night was in the same mental box as everything that had followed, with kissing and cuddling even without the assumption of sex, and taking it out to determine how he felt about it would mean reckoning with all the rest of it too, which — he couldn't. Which meant that he didn't know what was going to happen with this, and he never knew when he went through the floo to Macnair's London house if it might be for the last time, which was as good a reason as any not to go anymore.
When he was here, though, Ford didn’t have time to think about any of that. From the moment he arrived up through their climaxes the only thing on his mind was Macnair’s pleasure. In the aftermath it was something else entirely. The urgency was gone, replaced with a cozy, muddled feeling in his brain that he very intentionally tried not to identify, but his thoughts were no less full than they were when he arrived. Instead of concentrating on what he could do for Macnair, however, he was focusing on Macnair himself. Things like watching the way the other man’s chest rose and fell with his breathing, and allowing his fingertips to trace over the curves of his torso, could captivate him for minutes. This was what he was doing, basking in the afterglow and drinking in the sights and sounds and feeling of Macnair’s bare chest and his slow breathing, doing all of these things without thinking about the fact that he was doing them, very carefully avoiding that it was dangerous to be doing these things, when he first saw the ghost.
He floated through the wall just on one side of the headboard, emerging in Ford’s field of vision a mere three or four feet away. At first Ford wasn’t sure what he was seeing, despite how often he worked with spirits — he had not particularly expected to see one here — and he blinked rapidly before realizing that shit, that was an actual ghost in the room with them, and shit, Ford was still naked. With a noise of surprise and alarm, he scrambled for the edge of the nearest sheet to try and cover himself, while the ghost, entirely unimpressed, drifted out through the opposite wall.
Set by Lady!