peacemakers: (004)

[personal profile] peacemakers 2016-10-02 09:22 pm (UTC)(link)
[ He lets out a breath, something close to quiet chuckle, and lifts his eyebrows. ]

Well, then, Miss Emma. That's certainly an incentive to pull through this, if I ever heard one.

[ His voice stays bright, even if hers doesn't. Not because he's trying to recapture the previous mood – that ship has long since sailed, and Faraday lets it go without any resentment – but because it's the tone he strikes by default. Easier to go through life playing the joker.

The revolver in his crossdraw holster practically leaps into his hand, and Faraday shoots from the hip. Four bullets in a tight spread, fired in the span of a breath. He grins – of course he'd be the type to find pride in his own skill – and looks at her askance. ]


You know I'm gonna be holdin' you to that, now, right?
peacemakers: (014)

[personal profile] peacemakers 2016-10-03 02:36 am (UTC)(link)
[ He lifts both hands from his belt again, that same stance of surrender which is belied by the amusement dancing in his eyes. ]

I make no such assumptions, I assure you. But trust me, Miss Emma, I plan on claiming that prize, soon as the smoke clears.

[ Not that Faraday has any illusions about his part in the fight, or his chances in surviving to see the other side. They're fighting a war with a handful of soldiers against Bogue's army; to expect he might live is foolish, at best.

Hope, though. That's an entirely different animal. He hopes he lives, knows full well his chances are slim, but somehow, Faraday finds peace with that. He may seem a self-serving, cocky bastard at the best of times, but he's no coward. He sees the job in front of him and knows what he has to do, knows he has folks depending on him to play his role. Horne might say Faraday's sense of serenity has to do with helping his fellow man, finding purpose in laying down his life that others may live, cite some verse to bolster his claim. And maybe there's truth to it.

And it's foolish, maybe, making these little promises and bets, but there's no harm in hope, is there? ]