November, 1887 — An Opium Den
Can you come get me? the note had read, with a floo address crookedly scrawled beneath. He didn't stop to sign it; by now he thought Hudson recognized his handwriting. Hopefully that still hold true even when his hand was shaking as he wrote it. Hudson wasn't going to enjoy the task, he was sure of that; Hudson didn't like this sort of thing. If he'd had other options, he would have taken them... but the friends he'd arrived with had disappeared, perhaps back through the floo to somewhere else or perhaps into one of the private rooms at the opium den or perhaps into thin air, for all he knew. He couldn't get himself home because his pockets were empty — no wand, no coin to buy a pinch of floo powder, and apparently no credit at the counter (he was not sure how that had happened; presumably he'd bought quite a bit of opium and either not realized it or forgotten about it). He couldn't walk, because it was cold and half his clothes were gone, and anyway no one walked anywhere — certainly people did not walk from whereever-this-was to Ireland in the span of a night. So he needed help from someone, and though there were other people he could have called upon — friends, siblings, even the staff at home — the person he wanted was Hudson. No one else had occurred to him until after he'd already handed the letter over. He didn't see any owls around, but they said it would be sent. He'd just have to hope for the best.
He'd sent the letter in a brief moment of lucidity: suddenly looking around and realizing the state of affairs, seeing that he was surrounded by unfamiliar faces and had no conception of how long he had been here. It didn't last long. Retreating from the counter and falling back into a pile of cushions stacked vaguely into the shape of a chair, Don Juan was immediately offered opium pills. His, apparently, and yes he had bought quite a large amount of them, and seemed to have been generous enough to share with half the room. He didn't consciously decided to take it; just his body working on habit and instinct, crushing the first pill between his teeth and the using his tongue to push the powder up into his gums so that he'd feel it faster. No one who was serious swallowed pills whole.
It started with the rush, then the drop. When the unnatural relaxation started the wane, he took another pill and let the process start over. His entire body relaxed, piled languidly like melted wax at the base of a candle. His eyes moved behind closed lids. His mind shut off. By the time he heard someone say his name he had entirely forgotten having written a letter at all. "Hmmm?" he mumbled. It took great effort to flutter his eyelids open, and even more effort to try and focus his gaze. Hudson? Not a person he expected to see in a place like this; maybe he was hallucinating. He reached a hand out lazily to try and touch him, expecting some dream-logic to take over and prevent him from making contact. Hudson was standing up and Don Juan had no desire to be, so his hand connected with the fabric of Hudson's pants just below the knee. His fingers closed around it, rubbing the cloth through his fingertips as though he needed to be convinced that the sensations aligned with reality. He certainly did feel very — solid.
He'd sent the letter in a brief moment of lucidity: suddenly looking around and realizing the state of affairs, seeing that he was surrounded by unfamiliar faces and had no conception of how long he had been here. It didn't last long. Retreating from the counter and falling back into a pile of cushions stacked vaguely into the shape of a chair, Don Juan was immediately offered opium pills. His, apparently, and yes he had bought quite a large amount of them, and seemed to have been generous enough to share with half the room. He didn't consciously decided to take it; just his body working on habit and instinct, crushing the first pill between his teeth and the using his tongue to push the powder up into his gums so that he'd feel it faster. No one who was serious swallowed pills whole.
It started with the rush, then the drop. When the unnatural relaxation started the wane, he took another pill and let the process start over. His entire body relaxed, piled languidly like melted wax at the base of a candle. His eyes moved behind closed lids. His mind shut off. By the time he heard someone say his name he had entirely forgotten having written a letter at all. "Hmmm?" he mumbled. It took great effort to flutter his eyelids open, and even more effort to try and focus his gaze. Hudson? Not a person he expected to see in a place like this; maybe he was hallucinating. He reached a hand out lazily to try and touch him, expecting some dream-logic to take over and prevent him from making contact. Hudson was standing up and Don Juan had no desire to be, so his hand connected with the fabric of Hudson's pants just below the knee. His fingers closed around it, rubbing the cloth through his fingertips as though he needed to be convinced that the sensations aligned with reality. He certainly did feel very — solid.
MJ made this <3