Slingin' from the hip, never the heart. | Open Post

Raylan's job took him everywhere, from Harlan to Los Angeles to Paris. The Marshals service was demanding but Raylan leaned into the work, traveling as needed to get to get his man.
[Use this post to start threads or PSL'S!]
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He leaned down again this time with a faint smirk on his lips. "But I always get what I want outta men strapped to a chair, bull. One way or another."
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"Unfortunately, nothin' I can say is gonna change your point of view on that. You're gonna have to choose to trust me or we're at somethin' of an impasse here."
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"You haven't offered me anything but a drink so far, bull. What am I ta gain from that?"
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"A lot can come with a drink. First steps. Like hashing out what it is you actually need. A room, a place to stay? Somethin' to eat? We can get room service up here. You know I don't live here, right? Here in New York?"
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Collins shifted his stance slightly so that one of his legs was on the outside of Givens's own. His gaze was on the point of contact he created with their knees again rather than the lawman's stare. His knee tapped idly against Raylan's knee in a slow rhythm. "And where is that then?"
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He tilts his head the other way a little, only glancing at Collins half straddle of his leg before he was back to watching the man's face.
"Trade you a rope for an answer." Look, he had to try, and Collins had tied him up pretty damned thoroughly. "Were you carryin' this much rope?" He glances around, like he might catch the sight of a bag or something.
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The assassin tilted his head to one side as if contemplating the deal Raylan wanted to make. "Look at me," he demanded, tone suddenly less friendly. He waited till the marshal returned his gaze to the contract killer and then smiled, voice returning to the casual cheer from before. "I want somethin' else, if I'm bein' honest."
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There was no question in his mind what Collins wanted. That wasn't going to stop him from asking, from making him say it. It also didn't stop his own personal struggle with trying to avoid having an.. engorging reaction. Sitting at almost half mast already, he was hoping it wasn't noticeable in the folds of his jeans.
"And what's that?" His tone was just as casual as it had been, only a little more pointed as it was posed as a soft challenge with a faint lift of his eyebrows and the edges of his lips.
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He leaned over again, hand on Raylan's thigh once more, dangerously close to discovering the lawman's secret. Maybe it became apparent when he touched the tension filled pants, but it definitely became obvious when Collins shifted his thumb just so to trail a line over Raylan's member through the line of material. The Butcher's eyebrows rose in amusement at the same time his grin enlarged even further.
"Oh. You remember it well, apparently. Do you want ta play, then?" He asked and their faces were close, close enough to breath in each other, close enough to touch with minimum movement.
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"This ain't there, Collins. There's consequences here. If not for you, then for me."
In full honesty to himself, Collins scared him a little. He was very much a dangerous man, capable of putting Raylan down for good and cheating to do it. And what would Willa do, who would she become, without him around? The Barge provided him a guarantee of safety that the real world couldn't. He also couldn't trust that his inclination wouldn't be used against him here in a way that made it clear to others what he may or may not enjoy.
There was a lot of baggage built into the walls that kept Raylan Givens alive. A lot that he couldn't set down so easily out here.
That didn't stop his cock from continuing to get hard. For everything he had to protect in this world, a radical amount was denied. Can't exactly find someone willing to tie you up and whip you, and remain secure and anonymous. He wanted the rough tumble he knew was behind the words, but he couldn't have it.
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"And what of consequences do you fear, bull?" he said, sounding bored.
The killer's gaze flicked to his hands now as he examined them. The blunt nails were a little less than immaculate and might need tidying up soon. He had a weapon on him and tools nearby if he wanted to grab one. He didn't think the intimidation would make a difference to the lawman and he wasn't certain he wanted that anyway. What was the point if it was just that.
But there was that desire to make the bull sing, listen to his song for one final time, then walk away. If he couldn't have it any other way maybe he would just go back to what he was good at. That had always been enough in the past. It would be fine now, too.
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And how often had he done that himself.
"You pull some bullshit, I end up comin' after you, any case that might be made gets ruined right out if anyone finds out about us 'playin' games' together." Raylan didn't much care for that kind of vocabulary; they were adults and he was of the mind they should call a screw a screw, but it was hardly the most important thing right now.
"I'd like to think you gettin' off that boat means that maybe you aren't keen to take your normal well beaten path." Collins would prove him right or wrong either way, but Raylan didn't have enough information himself to guess which way the Irishman would go.
"Then again, I am strapped down to a chair currently."
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Collins walked away. He knelt on the other side of the bed and the small sounds indicated he was rummaging through an assortment. When he stood back up he had a length of wire held between his hands. The grip was familiar and sure. He paused back in front of Raylan now.
He shook his head. "You come after me I'd expect you ta do tha courtesy of finishin' tha game permanently. Don't you remember? It's all I ever wanted."
Not all that Barge bullshit. He hadn't wanted any of that. The small community, the shenanigans, the magic, the forced lives and emotions that came along with them. All of it stuffed inside and hurting, confusing. Turning him into something he didn't understand much less want.
"But we can skip all that if ya want. I'll hear yer music either way."
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So Collins would have to force his hand. Make that choice.
Raylan didn't let it show, but his stomach twists in terrified anticipation as Collins stands with the wire in his hand. This could not be how Raylan went out. This was bullshit.
"This is bullshit," he states, now getting a little annoyed. "You didn't come here to kill me and you didn't come here just to fuck me either. You put me down, Collins, and whatever you actually came here for is gone and you have a whole branch of the US Government crawling all over this city inside 4 hours. Fuck yourself over and for what? Me not barkin when you say speak?"
No world that Raylan rolls over and begs or tries to trade on material things as desperate promises. He couldn't do much, tied as he was, but he is tense anyway, readied as he can be with an unmistakeable fury in his face.
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Most of them useless in this moment other than as asides. The meat of the problem was buried somewhere deeper than all that. That left him with two choices: continue down the familiar path of anger and doggedness, or risk the fire leaping out into the open. He couldn't seem to make that first step, not on his own. He stared at Givens with that impassive expression on his face. But maybe the lawman would take it for him.
"And what did I actually come here fer then, bull? What great insight do ya have ta share today?"
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But Raylan takes a deep breath in through his nose and his jaw works as he pulls himself back from telling Collins to get it over with it or let him up. A long moment of silence sat heavy between them.
"You came here for connection and understandin'. For someone who ain't here to coddle you or lie to you. For a way to survive and live a life that ain't myriad in blood and loneliness."
He pauses for half a heartbeat. "And I ain't sayin' no to that." Even if maybe he should be, considering.
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"Is that what yer offerin'? And you see me goin' fer that?" His tone was easy but there was more mockery there, too.
Then it all disappeared again behind the brightness of fiery anger. An easy emotion to fall back on for someone like the Butcher.
"You goin' ta set me on tha straight and narrow path, bull." He took a step forward. "Goin' ta make an honest man of me? You think I rolled over... and now I want that fake bullshite."
Another step, quicker, eliminating all space between them and he reached out to wrap the wire around Raylan's neck. The string was pulled taunt but not enough to impend breathing--not yet.
"What makes you so special then. Go on, sing yer praises. Tell us."
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"I don't know. You're the one showed up here, I didn't go lookin'. You tell me. Or kill me and get it over with. I ain't a mind reader."
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"You were tha only one that weren't tainted... forced... by unnatural ways ta have a connection. Yer tha only one-" He was still angry. He couldn't keep it out of his voice if he tried. "-that I have ta wonder why instead of fightin' ta keep tha realities straight."
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"Kill me and you'll never get that answer." If he were in a less precarious situation, he might have elaborated, but he was one good twist away from dying. Seemed like a time to be succinct.
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He released his hold on one end of the wire and slipped back in place to be in Givens's face. His eyes burned with a murderous rage and if the earlier noise didn't make it clear how irritated he was then the obvious frustration in his expression certainly did.
"I could go back to tha way things were. To how simple and rewardin' it was. I never asked fer any of that crap. I never wanted ta change." He was breathing hard, the tension in his muscles clear from his grip still on one end of the wire. "I never wanted any... connections... or- I didn't need any of that then! And it would be easier ta sever that thread, right here, right now!"
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So he focuses instead on what Collins is choosing to say. A lot of past tenses. 'I never wanted connections, didn't need any of that'. Most importantly: 'its hard to kill you'. Even under the hard breathing and the obvious frustration, those weren't small things.
"Except if you not wantin' it, not needin' it factored into this, I'd already be bleedin' out. It scare you? Grip you with a concern that I'm gonna reject you and swear you off, promise to ruin your life, treat you the way you feel you oughta be treated-" Collins had earned a particular way of being treated and even though they weren't on the Barge anymore, Raylan could see the possibility in Collins. What he could become if he put in a little work and self reflection. What he could become if he had someone who understood, who might be able to support him.
This was not Raylan's natural way of thinking about things, but the time on the Barge had it's own effect. He knew progress could be made. He just had to make sure he didn't die in the midst of it.
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That didn't mean the lawman was off the chopping block.
"You already did," he accused huskily.
The Butcher yanked on the wire in his angry frustration and it tightened around Raylan's neck--briefly, as it snagged against itself then miraculously slipped through the unintentional knot and came completely away from Givens's neck. It threw the Butcher temporarily off balance and he almost stumbled, catching himself quickly. But it gave the lawman more time nevertheless.
Short short tag bc I don't know what kind of openings this will give him.
Re: Short short tag bc I don't know what kind of openings this will give him.
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So he focuses instead on what Collins is choosing to say. A lot of past tenses. 'I never wanted connections, didn't need any of that'. Most importantly: 'its hard to kill you'. Even under the hard breathing and the obvious frustration, those weren't small things.
"But you don't want to do that. Go back to the way things were. If so, you wouldn't be here. I wouldn't ever know you were in this world, save for this. So give us both a chance to get you what it is you're lookin' for here, Collins. This don't have to go sideways."
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"You don't want-"
He started and stopped abruptly with an annoyed noise.
Collins hadn't come here for this in the first place. Tying up Givens hadn't been on the agenda so much as it had come out of the opportunity. He hadn't even planned on punching the man until he had seen him and the impulse struck him. It felt right at the time. But the lawman had gone down so easily, and then he'd had an unconscious body and everything he needed for an old bit of fun. It was so tempting.
A part of him hungered for it. An undercurrent in the music whispered to him in a familiar leitmotif that proceeded this type of entertainment for him. It was a tantalizing call, hard to resist.
Yet when he gazed at Raylan there was an unfamiliar song that sneaked its way into the harmony. It started off low, bleak, hard but somewhere in there a handful of major chords hit a higher note and the hope was undeniable. The slow tang grew on him until he had to admit the sounds were quite peaceful in their own way and he could get used to them being around more. If he concentrated on that theme hard enough, it began to form its own melody that drowned out the other tantalizing song.
He'd reached out to wrap his hand around Raylan's neck and for a moment the tension implied he would squeeze--then it ebbed out of him, and the Irishman slowly slipped the limp line of wire away from Raylan's neck. Collins stood there, quiet and with a war inside, staring at the lawman stoically, the emotion bled out of him.
"It would be easier," he repeated. His voice was low and quiet. "Than standin' here listenin' to you pretend to want to help me." The corner of his mouth ticked upwards slightly, but his eyes took on a hurtful sheen. "But you do talk a good game, even if it's only for yer own benefit."
His hand fell to rest on Givens's wrist once more, but it did not linger for long and eventually the ropes fell loose as the Butcher released his prey for the first time.
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