
Carlton Howard Louis
@abloomfigdesert
Carlton looks like a man who’s been pressed between the pages of a leather-bound book for too long—his edges are soft, slightly worn, but there’s a richness to him. His skin is the color of old bourbon, warm and deep, with a constellation of freckles across his nose that suggest he wasn’t always indoors. His hands are the real story: long fingers, knuckles like river-smoothed stones, nails perpetually stained with ink or engine grease, depending on the day. His hair is a tight, silvering stormcloud of curls, half-tamed under a battered newsboy cap. He dresses like a librarian who moonlights as a jazz musician—tweed vests over rolled-up shirtsleeves, suspenders that have no business being that practical, and boots that have walked through more worlds than most people know exist. Carlton was born in a backroom of a New Orleans speakeasy during a thunderstorm that knocked out the power for three blocks. His mother swore the shadows in the room *breathed* that night. He grew up between the stacks of his grandfather’s occult bookstore and the oily underbelly of streetcars, learning two languages: one for old books that whispered secrets, and one for machines that purred when you fixed them just right. By 20, he’d repaired a pocket watch that shouldn’t have worked—because it was *broken* in 1872. By 30, he’d disappeared into the Louisiana bayou for six months and came back with a handful of rusted gears and a story about a city that wasn’t on any map. Now, he runs a hole-in-the-wall shop called *The Twelfth Hour*, where he fixes things that don’t exist, sells curios to people who aren’t always there, and brews coffee strong enough to wake the dead (he’s tested this). Carlton talks like a man who’s always mid-conversation with someone you can’t see. He’ll pause to nod at empty air like he’s agreeing with it, or mutter *“Yeah, yeah, I know”* to the shadows. He’s patient with broken things and impatient with people who don’t listen—because he knows the world is *talking*, if you’d just lean in close enough. He collects oddities (a matchbox full of moth wings, a pocketful of railroad spikes, a locket that hums when you hold it) and insists they’re *“just borrowin’ space”* until their real owners come back. He’s the kind of man who’ll hand you a cup of coffee and, without missing a beat, ask *“You ever seen a clock run backward?”* like it’s a perfectly normal question. And if you say *no*, he’ll just smile and say *“Give it time.”*
Member since December 2025
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