Kratos Aurion (
flamberge) wrote in
savetheearth2014-02-05 10:21 am
[closed] let's pretend this is witty
Who: Danny Fenton, Karl Aurion
When: 1/26 (Backdated)
Where: Danny's house
What: A teacher decides to make a house call.
[The last thing Karl expected to be doing on a Sunday morning was to be dropping by one of his student's home, yet, here he is, right outside casa de Fenton and rapidly approaching the front door. Maybe he, of all people, had no right to come talk to Danny, especially after the being modified at xmas thing. Even so, after reading the post about Proud's death last night, worry kept on nagging him to the point that making a house call felt necessary.
Danny's a kid. Dealing with the weight of having, even if accidentally, aiding in taking a life won't be easy. Adults have trouble with it, to say nothing about teenagers. Something that Karl's come to learn, too, is that speaking with someone about matters like this helps. A LOT. And not just someone coming by to say 'oh it's okay!', either. Yeah, that helps about as much as head-rushing the nearest brick wall.
No, what's necessary is an actual talk. No sugarcoating, no needless sympathy, no pity: just a real, honest talk. Maybe Danny won't be willing, hell Karl won't be surprised it it ends up being a one-sided conversation, but a few things need to be said. He owes the boy that much. With that in mind, he rings the doorbell.]
When: 1/26 (Backdated)
Where: Danny's house
What: A teacher decides to make a house call.
[The last thing Karl expected to be doing on a Sunday morning was to be dropping by one of his student's home, yet, here he is, right outside casa de Fenton and rapidly approaching the front door. Maybe he, of all people, had no right to come talk to Danny, especially after the being modified at xmas thing. Even so, after reading the post about Proud's death last night, worry kept on nagging him to the point that making a house call felt necessary.
Danny's a kid. Dealing with the weight of having, even if accidentally, aiding in taking a life won't be easy. Adults have trouble with it, to say nothing about teenagers. Something that Karl's come to learn, too, is that speaking with someone about matters like this helps. A LOT. And not just someone coming by to say 'oh it's okay!', either. Yeah, that helps about as much as head-rushing the nearest brick wall.
No, what's necessary is an actual talk. No sugarcoating, no needless sympathy, no pity: just a real, honest talk. Maybe Danny won't be willing, hell Karl won't be surprised it it ends up being a one-sided conversation, but a few things need to be said. He owes the boy that much. With that in mind, he rings the doorbell.]
