Entry tags:
llorando en la inocencia de un ritmo juguetón
She doesn't say anything on the way back to her apartment. No sound offered save for the click of her heels and the rumble of her bike's engine, which dies as she neatly parks to one side of her reserved spot in the garage. Years of traveling across millions of miles, and never once has she invited a man back to her home, to an apartment she could arguably call hers and hers alone. There isn't any fear that stems from extending this invitation, no greater meaning that she's trying to surface.
It simply contrasts in its normalcy.
The lock clicks with a jangle of her keys, and Faye turns around, one hand groping for the handle as the other traces a line down the center of his jacket. Once he steps inside, he'll be able to see everything from her life on display, from case files for bounty heads strewn over the coffee table to evening dresses carefully draped over chairs in case of a sudden need.
Struck with a thought, Faye offers a small, amused grin.
"I'm Faye, by the way."
It simply contrasts in its normalcy.
The lock clicks with a jangle of her keys, and Faye turns around, one hand groping for the handle as the other traces a line down the center of his jacket. Once he steps inside, he'll be able to see everything from her life on display, from case files for bounty heads strewn over the coffee table to evening dresses carefully draped over chairs in case of a sudden need.
Struck with a thought, Faye offers a small, amused grin.
"I'm Faye, by the way."
no subject
"You have a good excuse for treasuring your life. But if I wanted to read you, I would. People aren't as complicated as they like to portray themselves as in fiction. Nobody is. Everyone's simple."
He curls two fingers between her legs with a sigh, slipping in, still dry, to scratch blunt, short nails against the velvet softness there.
"Different shades of simple."
no subject
He has the effect of making her feel wrong, even when she knows she isn't.
"I'm young. I'm beautiful, and smarter than anyone tends to give me credit for, because my face discounts my intelligence," Faye says, raising her hips off of House's lap just enough to shove her shorts and panties down until they pool mid-thigh. "And none of that says anything about whether or not the world is worth living for. Or if you have the right people in it. An individual chess piece is nothing but simple, yet it only takes thirty-two to make a game that people are still studying today."
A soft moan falls from her lips when she brushes his fingers by her entrance, still aching for the touch, and keeping the column of her neck perilously close to the brush of his breath.
"You're lonely. Simple idea. Solving that, on the other hand."