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I'm combing through the wreckage trying to find where I've been
#1
April 7th, 1891 - An Inn in Muggle London
CONTENT WARNING - This thread is marked M to encompass likely discussions of depression, trauma, and suicidal ideation. (I'll slap additional warnings on top of particularly heinous posts, but this is a blanket heads up.)
Cash woke up screaming for the fourth night in a row, thrashing in his sheets, pulse racing.

His room was soundproofed and had been for years — no one came in running, no one could hear him, the sense that he wasn't alone when he woke up was surely just a side effect of whatever nightmare had woken him up. It took a few minutes for his heart rate to slow down, and he settled back into his bed. He rolled over to look out the window and try to fall back asleep, but there was still that anxiety-inducing sense that someone was here, watching him.

He watched the gas lamp out the window for long enough that the sky turned to predawn and started to gray. The time didn't do anything for his unease — if anything, the anxiety was sinking in bone-deep. Fuck. Cash rolled over and clawed in the drawer of his nightstand for his wand and one of the cigarettes he'd already rolled. He sat up and lit the cigarette with a silent spell, and took a drag from it.

The gray light of London before sunrise and the soft glow from the end of his cigarette illuminated it. There was a fuzzy black ball — it looked almost composed of static, although Cash was having a hard time looking at it directly — floating above the end of Cash's bed, and he stared at it almost blankly. He expected it to vanish. He'd never hallucinated visually before, but maybe it would just vanish.

It didn't vanish. He rubbed at his eyes and let smoke curl towards the ceiling, and the ball stayed there. The longer he looked at it, the more anxious he felt — emptied out, like it was dragging everything he was towards it. He looked out the window and then back at the ball, and it remained.



By the time the sun actually rose, Cash knew that the dark mass was real. When he reached to touch it his hand felt both chilled and as if it had been shocked by static electricity, and the longer he looked at it the emptier he felt. He waited out Lucius' departure — usually Cash didn't rise until his father left to do Lucius things, anyways — before he actually rolled out of bed, the butt of his earlier cigarette stubbed out on his nightstand. Cash dressed hurriedly. He left his room and closed the door tight behind him. Maybe they just had a — ghoul or something, although he had never heard of a ghoul like this.

He caught the last quarter hour of breakfast with Belphoebe, and managed to make appropriate small talk even though most of his mind was committed to figuring out what was going on his bedroom. As she rose to leave, Cash managed to tell her that he was going to  that evening, and expected he may be out late — not because he'd had any previous plans to go to Excalibur's, but because he could not imagine facing the thing in his bedroom sober.

A few minutes after she left, Cash felt the same sense that he was being undone. With alarm, he turned around — and saw the same fizzling orb of blackness, behind him again.

Fuck.



By mid-morning, Cash established that the ball would appear wherever he went, and that it was making him feel — crazy. He smoked and tried to figure out what to do about this, how to handle it, because clearly it needed to be handled. He couldn't go to practice like this. He couldn't go anywhere like this, because — normal respectable people who had their shit together weren't haunted by random acts of the universe, this didn't happen to people.

He scrawled off a letter to Gallivan which hopefully encompassed everything he needed to say — something had come up, he couldn't come to practice, he'd see him later. He might have to come up with an excuse later because it would become abundantly clear that no Lestranges were dead, but that wasn't the first concern. He just had to tell Gallivan he wasn't skipping practice, not on purpose, and then he just had to figure out a way to get rid of this thing.

He knew someone who could handle hauntings.

He did.

He hadn't actually talked to Greengrass since the whole weird thing with dinner, although he wasn't avoiding him — they just hadn't run into one another at the club. And so Cash felt guilty about reaching out to him over this but what else was he supposed to do, just walk around with this thing appearing behind him, unbidden?

Cash had to go to the post office for this, no longer having his owl, and apparated from the sidewalk outside the Lestrange house so that he could beat the orb to following him. He mailed the letter swiftly and apparated again, finding an inn he sometimes walked past, and paid for a room with the same sense of urgency. It was less that he was planning on staying there and more that he needed somewhere sans magic to figure this out, because he didn't need rumors going around about this. His owl could find him there whenever Gallivan replied, and then he could use it — or the post office owl, or a Ministry owl, it didn't matter — to reply to Greengrass.

He bought a large bottle of gin on the way. Just in case.



And that was where he waited, rolling cigarettes and smoking them until the room felt hazy with it, replying to Greengrass' notes and trying to think about something other than the staticky ball. He was drinking the gin, but slowly — Cash had some vague idea that some gin would take the edge off of whatever was going on with the orb, and that too much gin would just make him more panicky.

He got a reply from Gallivan, tucked it into the pocket of his jacket, which eventually Cash draped over the chair at the desk in the room. He tried casting lumos on the ball, as if that would make it go away, and felt as if his head was splitting. He laid on the made bed in the inn and blew smoke rings at the ceiling.

He told Greengrass that the orb wasn't dangerous, and he was not sure that it was the truth — he was just sure that he didn't want a Ministerial record of himself being followed around by it. And the orb didn't feel dangerous. It was leaving him alone, other than hovering around in a corner of the room, as if it was waiting for time to tick by, too.

That was before Cash started replaying some of the worst things he'd ever done, or which had been done to him, on a jumped-up loop in his brain, anyways. The girls he'd been talking to for Lucius — a screaming match with Eli he didn't really remember — the danger he was very quietly putting Gallivan in just by continuing to kiss him — a replay of some of his most gruesome Quidditch injuries, almost like he could still feel them.

A door blasting off the hinges and then —

He drank more of the gin. He kept the room dark, although the blinds were up — he didn't want to light any of the candles and he didn't trust himself to cast magic with that thing hovering in the corner. He rolled cigarettes faster than he could smoke them, as if that would get him out of his own head. His pulse was racing again.

A knock came to the door, finally. Cash got off of the bed — it was vaguely rumpled now, because he'd been lying on it for so long, but Cash was vaguely rumpled now too. He held his cigarette between his teeth as he fumbled with the latch and unlocked it, and there was Greengrass, he'd almost felt like he wouldn't ever come, but he was here and maybe it would be easy to get rid of the — whatever this was.

"Hey," Cash said, trying for a smile, as if this was normal. He did feel a faint burst of hope because if Greengrass was here that meant he wasn't alone. He stepped aside to let Greengrass in through the door, glancing over his shoulder at the thing in the corner.

Maybe this would be easy to handle, now that Greengrass was actually here.

He didn't trust that it would be easy.



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#2
Ford had been thinking about this on and off throughout the afternoon, since they'd agreed to meet after work. Roughly half of his brain power was devoted to considering what, if anything, he should say about the whole ordeal where Noble had fainted at the dinner table, because Lestrange had put it in his letter and it was still sort of unresolved, but he couldn't tell him the truth, obviously. The other half was musing over how, if at all, he ought to apologize for spilling wine in Lestrange's lap. He did briefly ponder the thing that was following Lestrange, but he didn't spare it much thought. There wasn't much to go on in the letters, and he was mostly still convinced it wouldn't end up being his problem. Nine times out of ten, when people thought they were having spirit division problems, they weren't. This thing could have been a side effect from a spell, or it could have been a creature of some kind, or just about anything, really. The odds that it would be something covered by his division were fairly low, so when he thought forward to this interaction all of his nerves on the subject were focused on Lestrange, not his mysterious follower.

It was sort of a strange place to meet, but Ford found the address easily enough; he was familiar with the streets of London for work things, and it wasn't a lengthy walk from the Ministry. Lestrange looked a mess when he opened the door, and the room smelled of gin and stale cigarette smoke, but Ford smiled at him anyway as he walked in. It was a slightly more muted smile than it might have been, because there was something about the atmosphere in the room that didn't seem to permit an unapologetic grin, but he was pleased to see Lestrange and wanted to show it. He'd thought they probably weren't ever going to talk to each other again, after dinner, so this was a pleasant surprise — even if it was maybe more work-related than friend-related.

"Hey," he said, as he made his way inside. He glanced around the room, but he sensed it before he saw it — the feeling of dread settling over him like a cloud of ash. By the time he saw the little ball of darkness he knew exactly what it was, even though he'd never seen one in person before. It was less that he knew it and more that he felt it; it couldn't have been anything else.

Ford startled and jumped back, knocking into the small table behind him. "Shit," he said, fumbling to draw his wand. "That's what's following you?"

The following 1 user Likes Fortitude Greengrass's post:
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#3
Greengrass was here and Greengrass was smiling and so maybe there was a version of today where Cash got out of this room. He took a nervous drag of his cigarette — when Greengrass jumped into the table a part of him felt that perhaps he should have ground it out before opening the door for the other man.

His eyes flicked towards the little ball and back to Greengrass, who was drawing his wand. Cash pressed his hand against his pocket as if to pull his own, but it was laying where he'd dropped it on the bedspread, abandoned other than for the times he needed it to light a cigarette since he'd used it to try and cast something on the orb and felt as if his head was splitting apart.

It was hard to bring himself to be afraid of the thing at this point — he'd been afraid of it this morning, but they were past that now — but he felt like he should try, and latched the door behind them, in case of muggles.

"Yeah," Cash admitted, "Since — this morning. Last night, maybe."



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#4
Ford managed to get his wand out and pointed it at the little condensed ball of darkness in the corner, but didn't cast anything. He'd drawn his wand defensively, but it occurred to him now that he had it out that he didn't actually know whether the orb was going to do anything — he just wanted to be ready in case it did. As ready as he could be, anyway — he was not ready for this. He'd never seen one in real life before, much less had to deal with one. Technically he'd trained for this, but learning about something in the abstract was very different from seeing one hovering across the room.

His eyes slid to Lestrange, then back to the ball. It wasn't moving, but Ford didn't trust it enough to lower his wand. "Where'd you get it?" he asked. This phrasing sounded like it was something Lestrange had picked up at the market, though, which was wrong. This wasn't anything anyone would have sought out. It must have just latched onto him, somewhere, but Ford needed to know exactly where. If this was going on in London, it was a big deal, and promises to handle things surreptitiously aside, he was going to have to tell someone at the Ministry about it. This was way over his pay grade, of that Ford was sure. "I mean — where did it come from?"



Set by Lady!
#5
Cash was trying to pay attention to Greengrass, but his brain was still stuck on replaying things. (Belphoebe, tipping his head back, looking into his eyes, and then — nothing. He didn't remember what she'd taken. Just that she had taken something from him.)

"I don't think it really came from anywhere," Cash said, although it seemed like a weird distinction to make, to the extent that he was able to care about weird distinctions at the moment, "I woke up, and it was there." He tapped the end of his cigarette, sending little flecks of ash scattering onto his shoes.

He didn't think it would have been able to come in from outside, because while he was not sure, Cash would have bet money on there being a lot of warding spells cast on the Lestrange home.






MJ made this!
#6
Ford glanced at Lestrange and his eyes stuck on the other man for a moment, taking in his expression and the way the ash from his cigarette arced and fell when he flicked it. "That can't be right," he said, more to himself than to Lestrange. These things didn't just pop up in people's bedrooms while they slept. They always came from somewhere. Usually, from what Ford understood, they came from places where very bad things happened for a very long time. Torture chambers in the medieval days, dungeons where prisoners were left to be gnawed to death by rats, natural disasters where dozens of people were caught bleeding out and losing hope for hours or days before they died. Those were the sorts of situations that created these things, not just quiet nights in darkened bedrooms. Maybe it could sustain itself in a house for a while, if the conditions were right, but it couldn't have been made there.

But how could Lestrange have picked it up somewhere and not known? Even if he hadn't seen it start to follow him, out on the street somewhere, he would have felt it. He would have known when it started, Ford was sure. Ford still felt that gnawing sense of dread in him, and he'd only been here a minute. Lestrange had to feel it, too, and if he'd been around it all day it had to be even worse for him. There was no way it had latched onto him and Lestrange hadn't noticed right away.

"Unless —" he said, thinking out loud. Ford's wand drooped slightly, and he turned his body a little more towards Lestrange, giving him his full attention and hoping the thing in the edge of the room didn't take the opportunity to pounce, or something. He felt a little stab of fear in his chest as he said this next part, because he thought he already knew the answer. He knew the answer, and he didn't know what to do about it, and he didn't know whether Lestrange would even tell him the truth, but he asked anyway, his voice full of concern. "Are you alright?"

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#7
Cash wasn't nearly as worried about the thing in the corner moving suddenly, after spending all day with it — it did not seem to move especially fast, and while he couldn't shake it, it had not really done anything to him yet, either. So he met Greengrass' eyes and swallowed, and let the question hang in the air between them as he tried to conjure an answer.

Are you alright? Usually Cash coasted by on other people's polite discomfort to avoid being asked the question in the first place. Usually he could brush it off with a shrug and some sort of vaguely self-indulgent answer, or he knew the person on the other end well enough that he could admit it and it would be whatever. Usually he was not wrecked in the room of an inn with some black mass of magic hovering in the corner, forcing him to replay memories he tried to avoid.

He took a drag of his cigarette in the interim beat. He could say no and face the consequences. He could say yes and hope to coast by on that same polite discomfort, except they were alone and Cash had summoned him here. He could say something else, some other excuse, except I woke up screaming was perhaps more of an indictment than the truth on its own.

He took a few steps further into the room, dropped his still-vaguely-burning cigarette onto the nightstand and picked up the bottle of gin. "I don't suppose you'd believe me if I said yes," Cash said, trying for wry, trying for funny, and he punctuated it with a sip of the gin.



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#8
Lestrange was trying to deflect, and Ford played along for a minute because he didn't know what else to do. He offered a thin flick of a smile at the joke, and he tucked his wand into his outside coat pocket (not very secure but more easily accessible, if he needed it in a pinch) and purposefully didn't look down to see whether or not his hands were shaking. The smell of all the cigarette smoke in the room was making him nauseous — it was the smell of the cigarette smoke, he told himself, and not the looming prospect of having to deal with this that had him so unsettled. Because he had to deal with this, that much was obvious. He may not have had the experience or the knowledge to deal with it, but if Lestrange was right and that thing had popped into existence in his bedroom overnight, Ford also couldn't leave the other man alone.

"No, I don't suppose I would," he said, mimicking the tone as though they were just exchanging jokes about some topic that didn't much matter. Ford reached for the gin bottle in a casual way, as though he wanted a drink himself. When Lestrange let go of it, though, he moved instead to set it down on the table, out of reach unless Lestrange wanted to walk to get it. Ford didn't think it was helping, at this point, and neither were the cigarettes.

Moving back to Lestrange, Ford rested his hand lightly on the other man's upper arm. "Sit down on the bed," he suggested gently. He didn't really know what he was doing but this felt right, to get Lestrange into some more stable position so that Ford could try and figure out what to do next. "Don't look at it. Face me."

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#9
Yeah, he'd known he wouldn't be able to get away with that.

Cash relinquished the gin willingly, although he felt the loss of it — maybe because he wanted to drink more and maybe because he wanted something to do with his hands. He twitched his fingers accordingly. With memories of Belphoebe meddling in his mind — her office at home with all the little bottles with silvery memories in them, and some of them were his, lots of them were his, weren't they — it was easy to let himself be piloted by Greengrass, easy to take the other man's suggestions and just follow them. And Greengrass' hand on his arm was grounding, a real reminder that someone else was here, that he wasn't in an inn alone with that thing.

He dropped onto the bed, resting his hands on his thighs and tapping his fingertips against the fabric of his trousers for want of something to hold onto with them. He followed Greengrass' instructions, looked at him and tried to ignore the thing in the corner — his pulse was still elevated and he found himself unable to look Greengrass in the eye when he had memories of legilimency playing out inside his head. He looked at the other man's cheekbones, instead.

"You don't have to do this," Cash said softly, as if he knew what Greengrass was doing, or as if he hadn't asked for help in the first place.



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#10
Of course I do, Ford thought. The conviction that he couldn't possibly leave had seized him as soon as Lestrange had answered his question. No, before that, when he had waited too long to answer it — or maybe before that, even, when Ford had asked it in the first place. It didn't even have anything to do with Lestrange, he didn't think, any more than he'd tried to comfort Macnair because of any existing fondness for Macnair himself. He liked Lestrange, but that wasn't why he had to do this. He had to do this because he was here, in the room with something broken, and he could no more turn his back on it and walk away than he could have decided to walk out of his own body.

(He would have wanted someone to do this for Noble, if it ever became necessary, because with the way things were between them lately Ford wasn't sure that he would be there if it happened. Not this, specifically, because this was strange and did not just happen every day and Ford wasn't really sure if he even believed it, yet, but — the metaphor version of this. He was still worried about it, because Noble was still speaking a bit too sharply to him, and Ford didn't know what, if anything, was buried beneath the sharpness in his tone).

Should he tell Lestrange what it was? He ought to understand the gravity of the situation, Ford thought vaguely — he definitely should not have hung around all day with this thing just waiting for Ford to get off of work. On the other hand, at the moment Lestrange was listening to him, and cooperating. If he started to panic, he might not. Ford swallowed, eyes gliding back and forth between the dark ball in the corner and Lestrange on the bed in front of him.

After a moment of consideration, Ford pulled a chair from against the wall over to the bed, so that he could sit right in front of Lestrange. Typically Ford was taller, but the bed was a little higher than the seat of the chair, so this had them more or less on level with each other, and Ford tried to catch his eyes.

"We're gonna be alright," he said, trying to project confidence in the hopes that this might help ease the shock of what he was about to say. "I'm going to help you through this, alright? That thing behind you is a dementor. That's how they start," he said levelly; a neutral tone was another strategy to try and keep Lestrange grounded. "And it's feeding off you. That's why you feel this way."

Well, that was a lie. Spending all day and night with the dementor had a lot to do with why Lestrange felt this way right now, sure, but the dementor hadn't been the first piece of this equation. If Lestrange had really created this thing, he must have been feeling this way for a long, long time.

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#11
There was a brief flash of eye contact, and Cash lowered his gaze again, a quick tug away — except that Greengrass was saying we're gonna be alright and Cash raised his eyes to meet Greengrass'. If Greengrass was going to be here, in this room, with the stale scent of cigarettes and with Cash on the edge of something dark, then he at least deserved eye contact. Cash nibbled on the inside of his lip.

His conviction lasted long enough for Greengrass to say dementor, and Cash turned to look at the mass of darkness, turning back to Greengrass only because the thought he told you not to do that flashed into his brain. He couldn't force eye contact again, though, instead looking at Greengrass' eyebrows.

Greengrass was being very reassuring but Cash was wrangling with the things he remembered about dementors from his N.E.W.T. DADA class, which was not much, except that they caused despair and mostly hung out in Azkaban, not in random people's bedrooms in London. He bit down again on the inside of his lip, hard.

"That can't be a dementor," Cash said, the only thing he thought he could get out.

That couldn't be a dementor. It couldn't be a dementor, because it had not been here before today, and today was not the first time Cash had ever felt like this. Maybe it was the first time he'd retreated to a room of a muggle inn to feel it, but it wasn't the first time he'd ever felt like this — a gnawing bone-deep sense of despair and of nothing.

And if that was a dementor — then there was probably something really fucking wrong with him.



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#12
Ford reached out on instinct when Lestrange turned to look, putting his left hand firmly on the other man's knee. He didn't know that he'd read anything about eye contact with dementors, but it just seemed true that it was a bad idea for Lestrange to look. It would be easier to deal with it if the person it was feeding off of — the person who might have created it — wasn't actively interacting with it.

"We're gonna be alright," Ford repeated steadily. He hadn't thought about his choice of the word we the first time, but he did now. It was deliberate, sending a implicit message he was hoping Lestrange would pick up on. I'm here with you, and I'm not leaving. "It's just starting out. We can handle it. It's too weak to survive without you, right now. That's why it's following you."

Explaining this was one thing, but the bigger problem was not understanding it but handling it. Ford could explain it, and eventually Lestrange might believe him, but he still had no idea what to actually do.

"Has it gotten any bigger since it showed up?" Ford asked, reaching to retrieve his wand with his right hand though he still didn't know what he was going to do with it. "That you've noticed?"

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#13
There was a hand on his knee, and that was a reminder that he was here and so was Greengrass. And Greengrass was steady even though Cash wasn't, even though there was a dementor here, and Cash didn't understand how he was remaining here even though by rights he should have fled when he came in here and saw Cash with this thing. It should have been Cash's problem, his to figure out or — not figure out.

And Greengrass was asking logical questions about the dementor. Cash looked at the other man's wand in hand and felt a vague swell of nerves — which he shouldn't have felt, because Greengrass wasn't a threat, that was why he'd asked him here — but there was something about a wand in hands that had him thrown off.

"I don't know," Cash said, "I wasn't really watching it." He'd been watching smoke pool on the ceiling and drinking gin from the bottle, and the whole time this thing had been feeding off of him. He rolled the inside of his lip between his teeth again. "Maybe when I — I tried to touch it this morning."

Did it seem more solid now than it had in the predawn light when he first noticed it? He wasn't sure.






MJ made this!
#14
Ford felt a brief flicker of something when he saw Lestrange roll his lower lip between his teeth, but pushed it down. Not the time. Not that he would have had time to think about it anyway, because what Lestrange said next pulled all of his attention.

"You tried to touch it?" he asked, horrified. It was less the idea of the action itself and more the idea of how it might have made Lestrange feel, to touch a growing dementor. It was a wonder he'd even made it through the day.

Ford ran his right hand through his hair, a little clumsily since he was still holding his wand. "Alright, don't... don't do that again," he said, shaking his head as though trying to shake the feeling that had settled on him just imagining it.

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#15
Cash shrugged — now that he knew what it was, he felt sheepish about having tried to touch the thing, but in the morning it had seemed like the only logical course of action.

"I wanted to make sure it was real," he said, as if to justify it — except that was going to make him sound crazy too, wasn't it, because most people did not have to double check that the things they were seeing were real. (In his defense, though — Cash was fairly confident this whole ordeal was distinctly out of the realm of the normal.)






MJ made this!
#16
Ford swallowed. He had to give Lestrange that one, he supposed, because if this had happened to him he wouldn't have thought it was real, either. He hadn't thought there was any way Lestrange could have been telling him the truth when he said it had just popped up in his bedroom, after all. It still seemed surreal, and if it weren't for the dread in his stomach Ford might have wondered if this was some sort of hyperrealistic dream. His anxiety about Noble and the fact that Lestrange hadn't talked to him since dinner and being asked to come handle boggarts for people as favors, all rolled in to one really weird, confusing scenario his subconscious was playing out for him.

It would have been easier if this was a dream, because then he could just wake up and deal with it after that. He'd always been better at dissecting and compartmentalizing his own feelings than he had been at dealing with others', and if this was all in his head he could have handled it. But it wasn't. It was real, and Ford had to really do something, and he didn't know what to do.

He let out a long breath. He took his hand off of Lestrange's knee and put it on the arm of the chair instead, leaning to one side so that he had a clear view of the dementor over Lestrange's shoulder. It was just lurking there, waiting. Ford didn't know what to do. The only thing he could think was to starve it out, but how long would that take? And how was he supposed to do it? He couldn't just instruct Lestrange to be happy and hope for the best.

Ford didn't know what to do. He could not tell Lestrange that. He needed Lestrange to think he was in control of this situation, so he didn't start to panic. Ford had to be in control, but he didn't know what to do. He wanted to ask how this had happened, but would Lestrange even know what to say?

Ford let out another long breath. "I haven't done this before," he admitted, against his better judgement.

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