Mad Sweeney (
onlythebranch) wrote2018-02-11 01:00 pm
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(no subject)
First thing Mad Sweeney finds himself wondering is how she's not freezing her tits off in a getup like the one she's wearing.
It's late. Not many people are out and about this late, but Sweeney doesn't follow any particular schedule and he's been drinking heavily tonight, wanting to keep the bad luck at bay just a little with more than a few shots of whiskey, if it can be managed. Seems that it can be, at least for the moment, and he's on his way home with a cigarette tucked between his lips when he hears the cries for help.
Used to be he'd ignore shit like that. Or maybe that's not right. Used to be he'd care, but be unable to do a damn thing, bound by the laws and rules of what he is. Intervention was only his game when offerings were involved and most of the time, as the Fair Folk were lost to the land of legend, they weren't. But as beliefs have shifted, so have the rules, and for a long time now, at least a hundred years, he's been able to do more or less whatever the hell he wants.
Most of what he's wanted in the past is to be left alone. Now he's no longer sure, so at the sound of the cry, he turns in that direction only to find he might not be needed, because a woman in clown makeup and thigh-high socks has gotten there first and Mad Sweeney is mostly under the impression she's helping. There's another woman, smaller than the clown, and a group of three men and he knows the odds of that fight are still pretty fucking shitty, but he also knows not many women roam the streets at night wearing greasepaint and coming to the aid of others.
Chances are she's not just a woman.
Still, he saunters over, cigarette trailing smoke in the air behind him, the tip glowing in the dark. He moves through the shadows like he had over the rolling fields of Ireland, something only half believed when glimpsed on a starless night, though there's much less romance left in this man than the one who'd taken Essie's offerings and guided her life like a gust of wind.
Maybe he's not needed, but he's seven bloody feet tall and when he walks through the mist rolling off the ocean and comes into focus under the light of a streetlamp, all three of the men turn in his direction.
"Evenin', lads," he says, reaching up to take his cigarette from his mouth. Then he grins at the clown, a fair pinch of madness in that smile. She looks as fucking crazy as he feels some days and he likes her immediately. "Miss."
It's late. Not many people are out and about this late, but Sweeney doesn't follow any particular schedule and he's been drinking heavily tonight, wanting to keep the bad luck at bay just a little with more than a few shots of whiskey, if it can be managed. Seems that it can be, at least for the moment, and he's on his way home with a cigarette tucked between his lips when he hears the cries for help.
Used to be he'd ignore shit like that. Or maybe that's not right. Used to be he'd care, but be unable to do a damn thing, bound by the laws and rules of what he is. Intervention was only his game when offerings were involved and most of the time, as the Fair Folk were lost to the land of legend, they weren't. But as beliefs have shifted, so have the rules, and for a long time now, at least a hundred years, he's been able to do more or less whatever the hell he wants.
Most of what he's wanted in the past is to be left alone. Now he's no longer sure, so at the sound of the cry, he turns in that direction only to find he might not be needed, because a woman in clown makeup and thigh-high socks has gotten there first and Mad Sweeney is mostly under the impression she's helping. There's another woman, smaller than the clown, and a group of three men and he knows the odds of that fight are still pretty fucking shitty, but he also knows not many women roam the streets at night wearing greasepaint and coming to the aid of others.
Chances are she's not just a woman.
Still, he saunters over, cigarette trailing smoke in the air behind him, the tip glowing in the dark. He moves through the shadows like he had over the rolling fields of Ireland, something only half believed when glimpsed on a starless night, though there's much less romance left in this man than the one who'd taken Essie's offerings and guided her life like a gust of wind.
Maybe he's not needed, but he's seven bloody feet tall and when he walks through the mist rolling off the ocean and comes into focus under the light of a streetlamp, all three of the men turn in his direction.
"Evenin', lads," he says, reaching up to take his cigarette from his mouth. Then he grins at the clown, a fair pinch of madness in that smile. She looks as fucking crazy as he feels some days and he likes her immediately. "Miss."

no subject
"Respectable," she says, with a wicked grin. "I love the work, but it used to be all I did. Never took a gosh darn break. Never had fun like this." It was like she was punishing herself, she thinks now. She's a damn good psychiatrist, but she never let herself cut loose, because she did so too often as a girl.
no subject
Not that he knows a thing about psychiatry. Or whether or not she does know what she's talking about. Mad Sweeney's experience with mental healthcare is essentially nonexistent. He lives up to his name in a good many ways, but that's what being stuck as a bird for a significant period of time does to a person, he figures, and he doubts there's much psychiatry can do for him in that regard. Immortality doesn't help much either.
But what he figures is that whole suit and tie bullshit has to be intimidating for some people. Respectable doesn't always make a situation better.
no subject
"But I don't think I could do it anymore if I weren't gonna be me to do it."
no subject
And he likes her. She's fucking weird.
"I find anyone who's lookin', I'll send 'em your way," he says. He doesn't offer himself. She can't help him or fix him or whatever the hell it is someone would want to do with a man like him.
no subject
She'd ask if he needs to see anyone, but there are a few things about that. First off, she's pretty sure everyone needs to see someone. It's just a fact of life that they could all do with someone to listen to them. Second, she doubts he's interested; most people aren't. And third, she likes him too much to be his therapist. It'd be better if he found someone else.
"So what do you do? Or do you just go around beatin' people up at night and that's your job?"
no subject
"Don't do much," he admits. "Haven't had a real job in a long damn time."
What he'd done for Wednesday couldn't be considered a job, really. He hadn't been getting paid. Hadn't needed to get paid, doesn't need to get paid now. Wednesday had sent him to start a bloody war and he doesn't want to think on that. It's a good night, he's enjoying himself, and Wednesday can go fuck himself.
"Don't really need to work, though," he adds and he lifts his hand and rubs his thumb against his fingers, producing a gold coin.
no subject
And maybe, sometimes, about who's asking them to use it.
But snapping up gold coins isn't anything dangerous, even if Sweeney himself easily could be. He could probably snap Mistah J clean in two if he had a mind to.
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He loves it. The lack of belief is what's been killing him back in America and Darrow has given him a healthy dose of belief, but he still appreciates when someone sees what he can do with his coins and doesn't eve blink.
"Seems t'be I'm outta luck these days, but the coins keep comin' and I suppose that's worth something."
no subject
"Is it just being here that's unlucky?" she asks. "'cause this place is pretty weird sometimes. Not very lucky."
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He flips the coin toward her then, because this isn't his coin. It's one of many. None of them the right one.
"But I made a mistake, too, and I gave it away and now the woman who has it won't give it back," he says. "So she has all my luck and I have jack shit."
no subject
"I guess that's not something someone gives up easy," she says, even though her general opinion is that, if it's his, it oughta go back to him. People don't play like that, though. "Is she in Darrow? Maybe we could do a little, uh, convincing."
no subject
He's not sure what sort of magic the coin has imbued her with, what powers it's given her, but she can kick his ass without even trying. It had pissed him off at first and he thinks maybe it still does, but at the same time he thinks it's impressive. She can do things he's never seen anyone do, not even the gods, and it gives him a little bit of pride to think maybe it's his coin that's done the trick.
Not that the coin was his right off.
"It's a complicated story," he says. "But it's the coin that brought her back."
no subject
"Or maybe not. Bad luck, maybe. I guess it depends."