Malcolm x Raylan: Cowboy Surprise

Art was suspicious right off the bat when Raylan took a week off with the express note that his phone would be Out Of Order til the next Monday, but the Chief Marshal wasn't going to look gift horses in the mouth. Not when it suggested he'd have a few days of peace, until Raylan caved to turning his phone back on again. Still, he watched the younger Marshal walk out of the office and promised himself to check into the state of Harlan within 3 days to make sure that the place wasn't on fire. The smoke would reach him before he called, he was sure.
But Art didn't have much to worry about - Raylan had no plans on staying in the state for his vacation, beyond one day spent closing up Arlo's and securing it the best way he could before getting on a plane to New York City. He wanted to surprise Malcolm - it'd been near two months since they'd last seen each other and frankly, Raylan was tired of missing him. They'd called and texted, stayed in a fairly consistent, if odd houred, touch but it wasn't the same.
Once he landed, Raylan rented a car and navigated his way towards Malcolm's apartment, stopping to grab a bouquet of flowers. It was.. Extra, but Raylan didn't want to show up empty handed, just in case. Thirty minutes later, Malcolm's door buzzer was being hit, like Raylan was here to deliver something. Well, he was, but that was half the fun.

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"I'm a lot more fun to think about."
From upstairs, Jessica was starting to call for Malcolm and Raylan could just imagine the click click click of her heels on the floor.
Raylan glanced up the stairs and smiled crookedly. "Are we okay?" Collectively, he meant. Dinner was still something they had to get through before retiring to more distracting things.
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Malcolm heard her too and nodded his answer to the question, pressing one more quick, impulsive kiss to Raylan's mouth before letting go of him to walk up the stairs.
"Of course you were down there," Jessica said as they emerged. There's wine on the table; let Louisa know if you want anything else," she told them, click-clacking her way back towards the dining room.
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Jessica's quip was given a pull of his smile and he looked back to Malcolm. "I don't know who Louisa is, but I'm not much of a wine drinker. Does she keep scotch?"
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Louisa already collected his laundry on a weekly basis and cleaned his apartment, whether he wanted her to or not. But he could control whether he fetched his own drink.
As they entered the dining room, Malcolm went to the sideboard and took out two crystal tumblers and filled them from a matching crystal decanter, setting one in front of Raylan as he took his seat next to him. Jessica just looked at him a moment and sighed as she put her linen napkin across her lap.
"So how was your murder tour of my home, Raylan?" she asked lightly.
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Raylan followed Malcolm into the dining room, breaking off towards the table itself as he pulled his hat off and set it into a sitting chair on the way by. Manners dictated you didn't wear hats that the table. He waited for Malcolm to come back before sitting down, looking over at Jessica as she started them out.
"Overlooking the massive security issues that you have and the lack of paint downstairs, you've got a lovely home. Generational, as Malcolm tells it, couple hundred years? It's an impressive building." Hey, if she was going to be blunt about it, why shouldn't he. "How many generations of Whitly's have grown up here?"
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"Just these two," Jessica answered, gesturing between Ainsley - seated across from them - and Malcolm.
"Hi again, by the way," Ainsley said to Raylan.
"This house had been in my family," Jessica explained, "- the Miltons - for seven generations before it was defiled by Martin Whitly's crimes and it will be in my family long after I've scattered his ashes to the wind in whatever swamp is closest to the city."
Malcolm made an expansive gesture to the table. "So bon appetite," he quipped.
"What brings you to New York this time?" Ainsley asked, changing the subject, taking a sip of wine.
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He looked back over to Jessica, nodding his understanding of his mistake with a gentle, "Of course, the Miltons. Surprising that you'd want even his ashes that close," he offered with a fraction of levity. But Jessica's fury and bitter anger wasn't missed, no matter the tone she took. Raylan kicked himself internally for using the wrong name but no changing it now.
He glanced at Malcolm, quirking his smile faintly before he looked back over at Ainsley.
"Ah, well.." He glanced at Malcolm again. "I had some free time on my hands, so I thought I'd come up to keep Malcolm out of trouble for a few days."
Okay, not exactly the truth, but definitely not a lie. "Might help with a case, if I'm needed." He didn't expect to be needed, but it was a good cover over a cover.
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She nodded. "You're working out of the Marshal's office in Lexington these days, right?" Maybe she'd been poking around since confirmation of the nature of his relationship with her brother.
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He wondered how far Ainsley dug, but knew better than to give her more fodder or poke that particular curious bear.
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Malcolm's head snapped up. "You did not."
She gave him a wide-eyed innocent look. "I was just curious about who this mystery man was."
Jessica looked between them and then looked at Ainsley. "What sort of a cloud?"
"He shot a gangster in a quickdraw contest in a restaurant like it was the Old West," she revealed with a grin.
Jessica raised her eyebrows and looked at him. "Is that true?"
Malcolm scrubbed a hand over his face.
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He focused on Jessica first, with a reassuring tone and lift of his expression. "A Miami mafia gun thug pulled on a Federal officer and lost. He'd overstayed his welcome willingly." The fact that he'd given him 24 hours to get out of town wasn't something he was going to mention either.
Raylan's eyes shifted over to Ainsley then and while she was already pretty cute, the question brought a bit of seriousness to her brightness that Raylan knew she'd be able to use like a knife, once she got it mastered and perfected. "It was pretty widely covered there; I'm not surprised you found out about it. The Miami Herald has a half decent piece on it. I was cleared for being in the right, by the way, by the AUSA, 9 months later." Since he was sure the Herald didn't do a follow up on that.
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One of the staff brought out three salads and a bowl of soup, setting the salads in front of Ainsley, Jessica and Raylan and the soup in front of Malcolm. His place was only set with a soup spoon, as opposed to the full complement of utensils at the other place settings.
He didn't pick up the spoon right away.
"How is your human trafficking charity going, mother?" Malcolm said, changing the subject himself this time.
She waved her hand as she picked up her salad fork.
"It's going well. Eve is a very organized and committed young woman." And Jessica had made no secret that she was the sort of woman she thought Malcolm should have been interested in. "She makes sure my money makes a tangible difference to vulnerable people."
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Raylan was grateful for Malcolm bringing up a subject; he was bad at it and he didn't do dinner parties.. Unless they were for work... Or In-laws. 'Eve' made him glance between them as he stabbed a bite of his salad.
"Do you know what part of the fight your money is going to?"
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"Eve takes care of those details. She's a lawyer. She puts a lot of the resources towards prosecuting companies that cover for human trafficking or who turn a blind eye to it." She leveled a gaze at Malcolm, who picked up his spoon and ate a careful bite of soup, trying not to meet her eyes. "She was here the other day, as a matter of fact, showing me a presentation they were working on to lobby the government to put laws into place that would better protect people in this situation. I'm sure she'll get them to table a bill; she's very determined."
"I'm glad it's going well," he told her mildly.
"You stopped calling her."
"She didn't take my last forty calls, mother. I'm sure she's moved on as much as I have."
Jessica glanced at Raylan. "Maybe not as much."
Malcolm shrugged and poked at his soup. "Well, she should. I recommend it."
Ainsley cleared her throat. "An anchor position is opening up at the network."
Malcolm was happy to divert his attention to her. "Really? Do you think you have a shot?"
"I've heard a few good rumours..." Ainsley said coyly.
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The Marshal listened to the conversation, keeping his eyes on his salad, aside from a conversational glance around that without, would make him suspect. Of course it meant he met Jessica's eye and he gave her a gentle, unapologetic little smile that fell as he took another bite.
Nope, he wasn't stepping into this one. Not even about Ainsley's possible promotion - last thing he wanted to do was invited some idea that would bite him in the ass later.
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Ainsley beamed a little. "Leslie says I have the face for the desk," she told them happily. "I think she's really pushing for me with the brass."
"She produced your interview with dad, right?"
Ainsley nodded. "She says I have a lot of promise."
"The newsroom will definitely be a step up from roaming around the unsavoury corners of this city with a camera crew," Jessica noted.
"Yes, well." She gave her brother a playful look. "I'll miss being ignored by Malcolm at crime scenes, but what can you do?"
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"You fit in on screen, for what that's worth from me. Very clear articulation." They'd mentioned before at the Gala that Malcolm had gotten Raylan to watch some TV. He might have looked into a little more on his free time.
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"You said it would come in handy," Malcolm noted. He looked at Raylan. "She always wanted to do TV news. She wasn't interested in newspapers."
"Print is a dying medium," Ainsley declared.
The housekeeper showed up and took their plates, leaving Malcolm's at best half-eaten soup for him to continue working on.
"When do you find out?" Jessica asked, picking up her wine glass.
"Should be in the next couple of weeks."
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He smirked at Ainsley's assertion and didn't argue, leaning back for the housekeeper to do her thing and thanking her under his breath. He didn't really read like that anymore - most of his reading were case files, nowadays.
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"Would you like anything from the roast dinner, sir?" she asked Malcolm quietly.
He looked up at her. "No, thank you. I'm fine."
She nodded and slipped away.
"She's forever trying to get Malcolm to eat," Jessica noted to Raylan. "But to no more avail than the rest of us," she sighed, picking up her cutlery.
"I'm eating, mother," he pointed out, gesturing to his soup with his spoon.
"Like a baby bird, yes. I suppose I should be glad it's something other than candy."
He shrugged a took a bite of the soup.
Jessica looked at Raylan. "You seem to have a healthy appetite. This doesn't bother you?"
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"Well," Raylan started, trading his glass for his cutlery. "He ate some of my fried chicken and makes a mean egg. Can't say I don't agree on how little it is but he doesn't seem to be wasting away to nothing, as far as I can tell. Two meals a day is more than I get on the job sometime," he offered with a shrug of one shoulder as he started cutting into a little of the beef.
"Better than beer and fast food."
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"A little bit," Malcolm clarified, jumping in to derail that. "Homemade. Lighter than I was expecting."
Ainsley seemed to accept that, though she was still giving Malcolm a knowing look, which he met with a warning one. She turned her attention back to Raylan. "So you cook, too?"
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"My Aunt Helen, who wouldn't let me go off to college without knowing how to feed myself, taught me a few things. Bachelorism did the rest. It doesn't have to be great, just edible. It's got nothing on this, I'll tell you that. My regards to your chef?"
Was that the appropriate way to express that? He wasn't sure, but he busied himself with another bite.
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She was about to say something else when Malcolm - about to put his spoon in his soup bowl - suddenly skittered backwards, dropping the spoon with a clang that bounced it off the edge of the bowl onto the table and onto the floor and knocking over his chair.
His clearly terrified gaze was directed at empty space in the doorway.
"What are you doing here?" he asked cautiously.
Jessica and Ainsley looked over in mild alarm and it was Ainsley that said "Malcolm, there's nothing there."
While they were both startled by the suddenness, neither of them seemed surprised beyond that.
He squeezed his eyes shut for a moment, bowing his head and taking a deep breath, but his hand was shaking.
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Raylan looked at the women and waited for them to do.. well, anything. When they exchanged nothing but more confused looks, Raylan stepped over to Malcolm, turning his back to the ladies to do so and leaning in.
"You okay?" Oh yes, he had questions, but they could wait.
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THESE TWO. FUCK. /ded
I KNOW I CAN'T THEM
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SOFT FACES
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I say we start the next morning (once it's morning proper) in a new thread under the header