1stmate: genius by birth slacker by choice (Default)
Johnny-

I've labeled this envelope for you to open on your 16th birthday, so if you're not 16 yet, then put this letter right back in the envelope, young man!

But if you really are 16 - or older; I hate to think what that father of yours might do - then it's actually quite important that you read this. See, there are some things I didn't tell you before I left, though I doubt you would have remembered them had I told you. You were entirely too young. Although, now that I mention that, I suppose I owe you an explanation for leaving you with your father. It comes down, quite simply, to a choice between love and duty. Would you do what you love or what you've been told to do, what you'd like to do or what you feel obligated to do?

I chose what I'd like to do. I wish I could have brought you back here with me, but you wouldn't have been allowed until you started showing signs. Meanwhile, if I'd stayed with you, I would probably be deemed insane by now. I fell in love with your father while he lived on the farm, but the apartment he took for his new job was in the city. I ... well, I'm not a city person, and I'd wager you aren't, either. My family's genes are far too strong for that.

Unfortunately, I can't explain much of anything in a letter, so I'll just say this: when you find that city life isn't for you, when the lights and the bustle are too much, you get out of there and find a place where it's raining. You'll know, then, if you should come find me, and you'll be able to find me.

I look forward to meeting you.

Your mother,
Charlene Graves
1stmate: genius by birth slacker by choice (Default)
I don't usually do author's notes, but I thought I ought to for this one. This is the first time I've written with these characters, but I do plan to continue using them for the next few contests. Too much to explore for one entry, unless I want to spend hours writing it only for it to be too long for anyone to read!
I'd planned to start with them last week, but I didn't have the time to write at all. Still, "clouds" is the topic that gave birth to these characters, a connection that will become clear in later installments.



He drags himself out of bed at what has to be a horribly un-Godly hour, but instead of checking the clock, he keeps his eyes wedged shut to block out the sliver of light in the hall. Goddamn streetlamps. Goddamn law that says he can't put a blackout curtain on the window in his front door. (Goddamn police who fined him three times and threatened to throw him in jail if he so much as thought about putting it up one more time.)

The door nearly rattles in its frame as his unwelcome visitor pounds on it again. "Jonathan William Anderson, I know you're in there! Let me in out of the snow!"

He rests his head against the frame and fumbles with the lock, not bothering to take off the chain. As he eases the door open, he pries his eyelids up the tiniest bit and groans at the light. "What."

"Take that ridiculous chain off your door and let me in."

He forces his eyes open even further and makes out the blurry shape of an old woman on his stoop. "What do you want?" he asks as his lids slide shut again.

She sighs loudly. "To come in. Out of the snow."

"Why should I let you in?"

She sighs even more loudly. "Because you're causing a scene."

"You're the one causing a scene, beating down my door at god-knows-when, god-knows-why."

"Does family mean nothing to you anymore?"

He cracked his eyes again. "You're not my father. Last I checked, that was all the family I have."

"Johnny--"

He groans and shoves himself upright. "It's Jonathan, thank you. Now give me one reason not to close this door and go back to bed."

She sighs yet again at his impassive face. "Because I'm your grandmother?"

Jonathan opens his eyes as wide they'll go, not altogether an impressive showing. "You look nothing like Gramma Helen, and she died ten years ago, anyway."

"Mercy, I'm not Helen Anderson, and I never would like to be. That old stick-in-the-mud. No, I'm your mother's mother, and you'd do well to let me in before that headache of yours develops into a full migraine. The Graves family is not meant for city life, and I'm going to just wring your mother's neck for not leaving you at least some sort of hint about what you are before she left. If my own head doesn't explode first, that is."

He shuts the door, smirks to himself at her indignant squawk, and unfastens the latch. "Bedroom's dark," he offers.

"Fabulous," she says, sweeping into his house as though it were her own. He latches the door behind her and follows her bemusedly down the hall and into his refuge.

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