Drew Roscoe
Drinks were on Drew tonight. No very
good reason was given for the occasion, Drew had just gone out to the
shed where Erich was working, tossed him a sham rag, and advised that he
wrap up whatever he was doing and get cleaned up because they were
going to go find someplace to have drinks and unwind for an evening.
She didn't rush him, and whenever Erich was ready they'd climb into the
truck and take off into the city.
The drive was long, as always,
and it was certain that they'd flash between conversation and music
along the way. Upon getting into the city Drew took them into the more
cultured of Washington D.C.'s districts-- Du Pont. Here the buildings
were older, the shops and restaurants all flavorful and unique and
crammed close side-by-side. They'd pass by a large museum and not far
from Drew pulled her big Dodge Ram truck into a public parking lot,
killed the engine, and climbed on out.
She'd lead him up the
sidewalk for a few blocks, headed toward a bar she told him: "Don't
worry about it, it's not a dance club or anything. I know you guys
don't do well in places like that." The Kinfolk had dressed for the
settling cold of mid-November (encroaching winter) in a red
winter coat whose hem was cut at the hips, with the hood up to keep her
ears warm and brown leather driving gloves on her hands.
They'd
come to a bar that was set into a three-story brownstone of a building.
It occupied the main floor, the two on top were likely apartments or
office spaces. There was a large window beside the door, and a red
awning overtop of both. White text in the window declared the name of
the bar to be Jefferson's.
"See? Quiet enough," Drew'd offer with a grin before pulling the door open to head inside.
Erich ReinhardtWhen
Drew came into the shed, Erich was busy painting the quarterpanel. The
shed windows were open. The air inside still smelled downright toxic,
so thick with paint fumes that the space heater he's set up behind him
has got to be some sort of fire hazard. Not that fire would kill him.
Paint fumes either, one supposes.
He doesn't hear her at first.
The windows are rolled down on his Mustang, too, music blaring out of
the speakers. His head is down, just the top of it visible behind the
coupe. She has to call twice, three times, possibly enough reach in and
kill the music before his head snaps up.
"Huh?" he said. And then: "Oh. What? Okay."
They
go into the city. It's the first time he's taken a ride in her truck,
and the first time she's driven, period. He doesn't change; he did get
cleaned up, though, washing errant flecks of paint off. Tossed his
hoodie on, too. Half an hour or an hour later they're pulling up to the
hipper parts of town, the sort of place where restaurants boast
cuisines from all over the world; where record stores have taglines like
FIERCELY INDEPENDENT SINCE 1983. Erich looks out the window,
interested. He doesn't come around here often.
When they get out,
Drew buttons up that pretty red coat of hers. Erich is privately
amused: he wonders if it makes him the Big Bad Wolf. She reassures him,
and he glances sidelong at her.
"You don't know that about me," he counters. "For all you know I'm a regular at," he glances across the street, "the Manhandler Saloon."
He takes the door from her. Nods her in. Follows.
Drew RoscoeFun
Fact: One Halloween a few years ago Drew had gone in costume to a
party along with her Kinfolk friend, Lonna. Lonna had been Little Red
Riding Hood, and Drew had been the Big Bad Wolf. It was fun irony, and a
fun night. Well, the first half. The night had been fun up until a
couple of Fomori decided to spring forward after Kinfolk in a night
club. Drew had put them down with a gun out of a woman's handbag.
Somewhere in Chicago, spirits held and whispered stories quietly about
the Kinswoman who dug her knee into a monster's chest, risked her
fingers by prying his jaws open, and jammed the barrel of the handgun
into his mouth before pulling the trigger.
Most nights Drew liked
to consider herself the Big Bad Wolf, but when Wolves were actually
around that title was relinquished and the red hood would go up.
Like tonight.
The
quip Erich had about the Manhandler Saloon across the street was met
with quiet laughter from the Kinfolk, and she went on to explain herself
while Erich took the door and held it so they could walk inside-- her
first, him bringing up the rear. "I meant in general. It's usually
crowded, loud, hot, smells like a bunch of bodies, and dark. All of
that put together tends to either put you all--" and of course he knows
she means Garou when she makes the generalization-- "on edge. Or, once
or twice from what I've seen, just brings the predator too far out to
play. It's kinda never been a good choice in my experience."
Inside
the lighting is dim, as lighting in bars always is. It's built narrow,
deeper than it is wide. The bar's up against the left side of the
wall, there's a television showing sports news on mute with the captions
on, and a couple of people lining the bar with one or two of the booths
lining the other side of the wall occupied. Largely, though, as is
expected on a Tuesday night, the place was pretty much vacant. At the
far back are a couple of tables, more booths, two pool tables, a dart
board, a jukebox, and the bathrooms. Drew nodded politely to the
bartender and led them toward the back-- it was always the best place
for Garou and/or Kinfolk to be, as the conversations they tended to have
simply weren't suited for eavesdropping ears.
Drew chose a booth
for them and removed her gloves and coat, folding them over and tossing
them into the corner of the booth bench. Without the coat, she was
dressed in a pair of dark-wash jeans that fit comfortably, but
attractively enough. The cuffs of these jeans were tucked into mid-calf
height brown boots with low heels (he's seen her wear these before--
Drew was not a girl with an endless supply of shoes in her closet). Her
top was a clingy long-sleeved navy blue number with thin white
horizontal stripes slashing through it. Her hair was left down, brushed
out and relatively straight save for errant waves and kinks here and
there. She tucked her hair back behind her ears when the hood was down
to get it out of her face, and settled into the booth.
"Car looks
like it's coming along pretty nicely. Gotta say, I didn't really
comprehend how much work goes into repainting a car when ya started."
The tone was offhand, the sort that came with making conversation rather
than making a point. She took a drink menu from where it sat propped
up on a tripod against the wall's edge of the tabletop and flipped it
open to view the selection.
Erich ReinhardtErich
doesn't know Drew's history. He's no Galliard. He's not even a
Fenrir. If he had been either, he might've heard. There are stories
out there about her. The shit she's done. The shit she's killed. The
wolves she's loved, and the one that was her mate. All that.
He's
not privy to those secrets. He knows a little about her past, but only
because she's told him. He knows she's a widow at the ripe old age of
twenty...what? Two? Three? He knows she has no kids, has no family.
And he knows -- not because she told him, but because he realized it in
a raw and aching moment -- that she misses the family she had. And the
one she could have had.
Still. Bottom line is: he doesn't know
her very well. And vice versa. Maybe that's why she invited him out
tonight. They're friends, aren't they? Friends should know each other.
She
finds a booth. He wonders if she's been here before. He takes his
hoodie off. It's thin compared to her clothing, but then Garou burned
so much hotter. He wads it up and tosses it into the corner the way he
did at that Mexican diner; then he slides into the booth, plucks the
menu out of the tripod while Drew peruses the drinks list, and looks
over the edibles.
"Well, I'm sure dumping a bucket of paint over
it wouldn't have taken any time at all," Erich says. "But that car's
the nicest thing in the world that I can call mine. So I'd rather it
not look like shit."
Chicken tenders, he decides. And closes the
menu, sliding it over to her, taking the drinks list from her when she's
done with it.
"Almost done though," he adds, and tilts her a crooked smile. "You'll get your shed back soon. Not to worry."
Drew Roscoe"Eh,
I wasn't using it. The truck doesn't even fit in the damn thing, it's
too tall." She grinned across the table to Erich, and traded menus with
him when he'd finished picking his food. Drew flipped through the
pages of the eats menu herself and decided that nachos would be best.
She'd eaten an early dinner and wasn't particularly hungry, but how
could you sit at a booth in a bar without some sort of bar food to go
along with your drink?
They were given another minute or two
before a woman somewhere in her mid-twenties with curly black hair
twisted back into a bun, a full sleeve of colorful tattoos on one arm
and a septum piercing came over to take their order. Her face was dull
and bored, but her eyes were bright and very alert of Erich in
particular. Natural caution made it impossible not to be. Drew
politely requested the plate of nachos she'd decided on along with a
pint of some dark ale or another that they had on tap. The instant
Erich was done ordering the waitress whisked away to another table,
happy to get away from the table in the back with the dark current of
violence swirling about it.
"So," Drew started onto the
conversation again, apparently damn determined to find a topic that they
could talk on for more than two or three sentences. "Did you ever find
your tribemates? I think you're the only one of your group that I've
met out here." To be fair, she didn't get out too much, but that didn't
make her statement inaccurate.
Erich ReinhardtIt's
natural to want to find a reasonable conversation topic. No one wants
to sit in an awkward silence -- and the truth is, since the last
conversation they had on that street halfway between Browntown and
Drew's place, every silence between them has the potential to be awkward
now. The topic Drew picks, though, seems to put Erich in a dark mood.
Immediately his smile folds up; his brow furrows. Across the booth
from her, the young Ahroun shifts in his seat, suddenly disgruntled.
"Yeah," he says shortly.
That's
all for a while. Chatter goes on around them. A bunch of dudebros one
table over, roaringly obnoxious, drawing an irritated over-the-shoulder
glance from Erich. A couple a few tables down, dancing the age-old
tango of romance. Meanwhile Erich plays with a coaster, sliding it back
and forth between his big hands.
Stops it, eventually. Catches it under his fingertips, his nostrils flaring as he inhales.
"There
was a Shadow Moot. Basically a tribal moot, 'cept we have a rite
involved that makes it all official and secretive and crap. It's
bullshit. The rite, and the moot itself. Whole thing was bullshit.
Met a bunch of others, but everyone seemed mostly concerned about
looking like a badass. Don't think anything got accomplished at all."
A
beat of pause. "Met a Ragabash too. Not just at the moot. Ran into
her a few times now." A wry flick of his eyebrow. "Think she wants to
be friends."
Drew RoscoeThe mood darkened around
the stormy (by stereotype more than anything else Drew has seen so far)
Ahroun when the topic of his tribemates came up, and he answered with a
short 'Yeah' and let the conversation die for a second. Drew's eyebrows
flicked upward in curiosity, but she didn't press the topic. She was
pretty good at reading social cues like this, after all.
So, for a
minute, they listen to the chatter of the bar. Erich glanced at a
group of loud young men in irritation, past them for a moment to a
couple reaching for hands across the table. Drew seemed content to look
at the TV for that time and frown ever-so-slightly at the conversation
happening on the sports news channel about how her home team, the
Chicago Bears, had performed so poorly over the weekend in their game
against the Houston Texans.
Before too long, though, Drew's
attention is drawn back to the Shadow Lord with the face of a Fenrir as
he goes on to explain what had happened at the moot, and how he met a
Ragabash who wants to be friends.
"So be friends? It's good to
have connections within your tribe. What are we without our Kinsmen,
after all?" She shrugged one shoulder, the gesture rolling, and swept
her fingers through her hair, securing it behind her ears again with a
motion that was more habit than practical thought anymore. From there
she tugged at the shoulders of her shirt, tugged up the white undershirt
that peeked out through the low v-cut of the shirt she was wearing,
then tucked her hands into her lap so they wouldn't fidget.
"Sucks
that the meeting didn't really... assure you of the way things are
going with your people out here. I've experienced that, it's pretty
damn disheartening to find that you don't even like the folks you're
supposed to call your own." There's a pause, a beat, a thump of blood
in veins, and Drew met Erich's eye and raised an eyebrow. "Do you think
the New Moon wants you to make a pack with her?"
Erich Reinhardt"Who knows what the fuck she wants. She's a slippery one and I don't trust her."
Well.
So much for that. Erich sits back in his side of the booth. The seat
next to Drew indents: he's put his foot up there, stretching his leg
out under the table.
"Anyway," he adds, "I'm not really the social
type. I know that shocks the fuck out of you, being quite the family
girl yourself."
Drew Roscoe"That's fair," was
Drew's quiet answer when Erich stated quite firmly and frankly that he
didn't care what this Ragabash wanted because he didn't trust her.
Brown eyes hopped away from blue ones to instead investigate the shoe on
the bench beside her. They then hopped to the other side, as though
she was pretty sure a shoe would show up there as well. When it didn't,
she grinned a little (mostly to herself) and looked back up to the
Shadow Lord's face.
"Well yeah, I know you're not. You don't want
a pack or anything like that... but you still should be able to go to
your own tribe and tribal leaders for... I don't know... guidance? I
guess? Structure at the very goddamn least. I would hope to be able to
find that even if I weren't worried about making friends and
housemates. A tribe's only as strong as its members, yes, but without
shared direction there's no point to all that strength. There's
supposed to be a leader there that you all can turn to-- or a panel of
them, or something. Sounds like whatever you found left much to be
desired there."
Eyes dropped down to his shoe again, and this time
hands followed. She explained her actions briefly, off-handedly, by
stating: "Rocks," and held the top of his shoe with one hand while the
other dislodged pebbles and rocks from the driveway he'd been marching
about on from the cracks of his shoe soles.
Erich Reinhardt"There's supposed to
be," Erich replies, "but we're also supposed to be winning this war.
Truth is, I haven't found too many admirable authority figures in my
life."
They're interrupted. The waitress shows up. Their orders
get plunked down: a dark ale and nachos for Drew. A hefeweizen and
chicken tenders for Erich. The Shadow Lord glances up at the waitress,
nods a thank-you, then picks his brew up for a swallow. Chases that
with a big mouthful of chicken tenders, nudging the plate over toward
Drew to share. Generous guy, and all.
Meanwhile she's picking at
his shoes. And he's smiling across the table at her, a touch lazily,
leaning back in his side of the booth. "Drew Roscoe," he says; there's a
fond note there. "She who can't bear not doing something for someone
else. Stop that," he adds, "you gotta eat with those hands. And you
don't know where these boots have been."
Drew RoscoeFood
and drinks arrive. Both had ordered beer and plates of pretty standard
bar-food, chicken tenders and nachos. The waitress was prompt, the
food was presentable, and the beer glasses were full. She did her job
well and got the hell out of there to let the beast and his petite
lady-friend be alone to their booth in the back of the bar, because as
long as she didn't see anything suspicious she wouldn't be responsible
for anything suspicious-- like this viscerally violent feeling (because
he wasn't doing or saying anything, and he didn't
really look like much of a thug) man probably murdering the girl later
that evening and hiding her where no one would find after snapping over a
disagreement on what dressing is best on a salad.
"I think I've
got an idea. Gravel, shed, road, and jammed up the asses of enemies,
then squashed down on their heads to make sure they don't get back up.
Anyway, I'm done." This is announced as one last pebble is flicked out
of the shoe and tumbles somewhere under the booth. Drew scrubbed her
hands and fingertips thoroughly enough (for her liking anyways) on the
thighs of her jeans before snagging an offered chicken tender and, in
turn, sliding her plate to the center of the table as well to share.
"You
don't suppose the 'supposed to bes' are connected here, do you? Maybe
we ain't winning because we can't establish the right kind of
leadership?" She dunked the chicken strip in whatever sauce was
provided (ranch, honey mustard, barbeque, she wasn't picky) and munched
on it while waiting for his answer.
Erich Reinhardt"It's
related and you know it is," Erich retorts. "But even the humans have
only had a handful of truly great leaders in all their history. And
there's about seven billion more of them than us."
A last pebble
goes pinging off under the table. He leaves his foot where it is,
though: as though his half of the booth just wasn't big enough to
contain him. Him and all his rage. Him and all his strength. The
waitress is far, far away now. She can't stand to be in Erich's
vicinity. Some kinfolk can't even quite stand it. Drew Roscoe, though,
has iron under that diminutive exterior of hers.
"Anyway. Didn't
mean to start bitching and moaning. Doesn't even really affect me. I
do my thing, the same I always have. And I do my part where I can.
I'll say this for that Ragabash. She knows where to turn up shit to
kill."
Drew Roscoe"Yeah, but you guys are made of such greater stuff than
regular humans are. I remember you all better. Your faces stand out
more, your presence is stronger and... more correct, I guess. Somewhere
in this city, dwindling though our numbers are, there's gotta be at
least a fistful of good leaders out there that we should be able to turn
to."
With the chicken tender down, Drew chose to crunch on a
nacho chip before picking up her glass of dark ale and taking a deep
drink. Drew not only was able to withstand Rage, but she seemed to have
a good understanding of it. It was no coincidence that Erich was
invited out when the moon was absent from the sky. She knew him for
what he was when they met because she knew how Rage affected a body, a
face, and the air around that person as a whole. She took that
understanding and rather than using it to avoid the dangers of Rage and
protect herself, she instead used it to better tolerate and withstand
such a force.
If you asked her why, she'd say because good Kinfolk
don't flinch away from the people they were designed to be there for.
That was weak, and it was just plain rude on top of that.
"I
asked, anyway. You're allowed your frustrations, and who better to vent
them to than someone who has no investment in your tribe meetings
anyways?"
Erich Reinhardt"Not to mention," Erich
puts in, sardonic, "the one who almost had me convinced that family ties
were a good and necessary thing."
He picks up his hefeweizen. He
takes another slug of it, and then grabs a chicken tender himself.
Turns out Erich's a honey mustard sort of guy. He breaks the
deep-fried bit of poultry in half between his hands, dips one half at a
time. Drew's never seen him eat anything but meat, but he certainly is a
voracious carnivore: the tenders go down his throat quick as a blink,
and then he leans sideways to snag a napkin from the holder.
"You're always so forgiving of others' faults," he says, sinking back into his place. "Do you ever get angry, Miz Roscoe?"
Drew Roscoe
Drew's nibbling at nachos again when
Erich asks if she ever gets angry. This intices a smirk to curl on
naturally pink lips, and eyes flipped up from the nacho plate, where she
was making sure there were black olives on the chip she was bringing to
her mouth, to Erich's face.
"You have to ask? Remember what
family I'm from." Drew grinned, popped the cheese-and-black-olive
loaded chip into her mouth, and washed it down with a drink of her
beer. She wagged her finger some at the Shadow Lord, indicating that
she had more to say when she was done chewing. Once the nacho had been
properly chewed and swallowed, she launched into story.
"Back in
Chicago there was this Child'a'Gaia Kinfolk that couldn't take care of
herself to save her ass, and my Jarl had asked me to take this gal into
my home and take care of her and her babies. Now this lady had a baby
already, like not even six months old, and was pregnant again. Couldn't
find work, didn't want to in the first place, and wasn't even seeking
help from her own Tribe. Instead, when I went to find this gal, I found
her being a fuckin' housekeeper for a Shadow Lord, right?
"Well, I
didn't want her in my house for any number of reasons, but I was
willing to throw some funds her way to get her into an apartment or
something, and give that place to her to live until she could find a
job. But she shot me down, and then took offense to my even offering.
So, I run into her in some cafe a few days later and she's giving me the
evil eye the whole time we're there with some mutual friends. So I ask
her outside, and ask her what the hell her problem is.
"She goes
on to tell me that I don't know how to be a proper Kin, that I don't
understand the value of having and raising children. She gets hurt and
pissy and starts bleating about how hard her past was and how I don't
know what it's like to be in her shoes when I tell her flat-out that if
she can't afford to take care of her own kids then she shouldn't be
having them rapid-fire like that." Drew took another drink from her
beer glass, finishing it with this last swig, and set it on the edge of
the booth table. "It ended in fists. She tried to hit me, I swung at
her and clipped her cheek, and then someone got in-between us. So,
yeah, I get angry, and I fight about it. Just in odd situations-- like
when faced with dumb bimbos who can't maintain their baby-pumpin'
lifestyles."
Erich Reinhardt"I do remember,"
Erich retorts while Drew is doing her best to Not Talk With Her Mouth
Full. "That's why I'm surprised in the first place. Fenrir girl like
you, I'm surprised every time I don't wake up in your guest room with a
gun in my face." He pops a chicken tender in; he doesn't bother to Not
Talk With His Mouth Full. "For snoring too loud, or something."
By then she's able to talk again. He's washing down his chicken'n'dip with a mouthful of beer. She gets around to fuckin' housekeeper for a Shadow Lord and he gives her a look for mock warning. She gets to the end and he laughs aloud, and loudly at that.
"You
got in a fistfight with a pregnant chick? Didja win? I bet the
Children of Gaia were all up your ass about that. Y'know, in their
passive-aggressive let's-all-be-friends way."
Drew Roscoe"Surprisingly, no."
Drew
was grinning, clearly pleased with her story and the fact that Erich
laughed (and not just a little, quiet chuckle of courtesy either, but a
full laugh that came from the belly) from her telling it. Another nacho
was munched on before she leaned back, away from the plate, and took a
napkin up in her hands to crease and rub the edges. Drew had busy
fingers, you see, she was used to working and doing things with her
hands so keeping them still was awkward and uncomfortable for her.
"I
had a talk with my Jarl that night, and I suppose I was honest enough
about the fact that I fucked up -- and I totally know I did, but didn't
feel bad about it -- that she pretty much just told me to keep away from
that Gaian Kin and mind my own." One shoulder lifted and dropped in a
shrug and she left the story there. Another recollection of anger came
forward after a couple of seconds slipped away to thought.
"Oh.
And when I found out about Joe, the guy that told me was just... really
dick-ish about it. Shrugged his death off and asked me why I was mated
to him in the first place. This was in a bar where I had to track him
down to ask him where my mate had gone that he told me. So I broke a
beer bottle and got in at least one gash before I got knocked out."
This story is told simply, without sadness seeping into her eyes and
voice, or a solemn air flooding the booth they shared. More than
anything she was expressing how the Wolves in the West are assholes.
Erich ReinhardtThat
changes the mood. Erich's humor fades; his eyes go to his food, his
drink. Silence unfurls for a while, enough for him to grow aware of
conversational chatter around them, music in the background that no
one's paying attention to. He nurses a long sip of his beer, and then
looks at Drew again.
"What happened with your man, anyway?" He's
quieter now. "Don't think I ever asked. Just assumed he died in battle
like every other Son of Fenris out there."
Drew RoscoeDrew
was trying not to let the mood change, tried to put a casual spin on
mentioning her deceased mate in the telling of a story, but Erich (child
of Storm and Thunder) went solemn and dropped his eyes from Drew's,
sureveying the good laid out on the table before him instead. After a
minute of shared quiet he took a drink of his beer and, looking back up
to the Kinfolk across the way from him, asked how Joe had died.
"He
was murdered," she told him without hesitation. The resolve in her
voice made it difficult to disbelieve her. And why would he, anyways?
Her brown eyes held Erich's for a second, like she could convince him of
the truth in that statement with her gaze as much as her words. When
she started talking again, her eyes dropped to the napkin that she was
creasing and smoothing repetitively.
"Joe was a member of the
Swords of Heimdall camp. From what I understand, that's a pretty bad
thing to be. He was ostracised for it. And, yeah, he was racist and a
bit of a purist, but that didn't make him a bad Fenrir. If someone was
Strong, it didn't matter to him in the end of it. He was a damn fine
Jarl to Chicago, a good Alpha to his pack, and a good Mate.
"The
folks in Seattle didn't agree. From what I understand they put him on
trial for his Camp, told him that he had to renounce all of his rank and
glory and start from scratch, otherwise they'd kill him. Joe was
proud. He spat on their feet, sneered and laughed and I hope to hell killed two or three on his way down into the earth."
There's
fire in Drew's eyes and voice as she tells Joe's tale. This isn't the
kind of thing that's forgiven, ever. She's also not going to be told
that those who put Joe on trial were right to do so. That's plain as
day to see.
Story told, Drew looked away, found the waitress, and reached over to lift her empty glass to indicate she'd like a refill.
Erich ReinhardtSword
of Heimdall, she says. Racist, purist, a bad thing to be. Strong,
too, she says. A good Jarl, a good Alpha, a good mate to her.
There are people who would look at Drew with pity now. Men and women who would look at her with sad eyes and say things like oh, honey, can't you see him for the monster he was? can't you see you're lucky to be rid of him?
And there are people who -- perhaps more disturbingly -- would look at
Drew with a new sort of recognition, as though her mate's associations
tainted her as well. Who might start muttering things about the master
race and needing to get on top again, needing to get this country under
control, can you believe there's a monkey in the white house.
To
be sure, Erich's looks would put him more easily in the latter
category. Just look at him. The Swords would have been glad to have
him. Would have made him their posterboy, put a goddamn banner in one
of his big hands, a hammer in the other. So fucking Aryan: the pale
skin, pale eyes, pale hair. He's not a Sword, though. He's not a
Fenrir, even, and if nothing else -- he understands that things are
never black and white.
It's a while before he answers. And when
he does, it's quiet; slow. "The Swords," he says, "were still out in
force when I was a kid. I saw some of the shit they did once. Heard
about lots more. They weren't good people, Drew. They were a growing
Wyrm-cancer in your tribe, and the Fenrir were right to stamp 'em out
before they turned into another Silver Spiral deal.
"I don't know
the story with your man. Could be he was a good Garou, and we're weaker
for his loss. Could be they just got to him early and he never stopped
to think about it. Could be he didn't even really believe by the end,
and he was just defending his pride. But the Fenrir don't see shades of
grey and they don't take well to being told no. He and his tribesmen
made a call that day. He decided not to renounce. They decided to kill
him."
A pause.
"The good and the bad," he adds then,
"aren't always mutually exclusive. Whatever your man's strengths and
glories, he was part of a camp that was headed straight for Malfeas.
And whatever his alliances, he was still, as you say, a good son of
Fenris. And your mate. It is what it is. You can't sugarcoat either
side. If there's some cosmic balance that decides whether a man's good
in nature or bad, it's not for us to tip."
Drew RoscoeErich
explained to Drew why the Swords of Heimdall were such a bad thing, and
told her that they were going to the Wyrm and it's a good thing that
the camp has largely been stamped out. He went on to express that this
didn't necessarily mean that Joe was bad because he didn't know him, but
the camp certainly was. Drew nodded thankfully to the waitress when
she quickly dropped a refill of Drew's dark ale off at the table, then
took the beer in her hand and had another deep drink from the fresh
pint.
Drew was good at listening, she let Erich finish. But it
seems she'd already made up her mind before he was even done talking,
because when he finished she was shaking her head to help him close up
his last sentence.
"Doesn't matter who raised him up. I thought
it was terrible, all the hate and the marks on him. I got to know him
better. I'm not defending his camp, and I won't ever. But Joe was so much more than
any title given to him, or that he gave himself. Doesn't matter who's
good or bad, what matters is that he's gone, that he was gone too early,
and that he didn't go right.
"Thomas is puttin' his soul to rest right now. I'm hoping that at least sets it as right as it can be."
Drew's
defense petered out there. She abandoned her napkin, folded and
smoothed and fraying at its paper edges now, and instead wrapped both
hands about her pint glass and held it near her face like she could mask
her mouth behind it. Eyes drifted about Erich's face as she spoke to
him, and when she finished they relaxed down to look someplace more
level to her height, and settled on his collarbone as a result.
"....Don't suppose we can talk about something else and keep the night cheery, huh?"
Erich ReinhardtThere's
this at least: he doesn't argue with her. She doesn't argue with him,
either. Could be there's nothing to argue about, really; they're more
or less on the same page. There's good; there's bad. And for Drew, no
matter the bad, the good was there, and worth it, and worth holding on
to longer than she had it. Had him.
And she's his mate, after
all. His widow. Erich supposes if anyone had the right to make that
call, it'd be her. And maybe this mysterious Thomas who came around
speaking of carrying grief and burying memories.
The conversation
dies with Drew's defense. Erich looks down to find most of his chicken
gone, which is no surprise; he's a ridiculous carnivore, capable of
putting away nearly obscene amounts of meat. Drew's only seen him in
wolf-form the once, but that looked like a flesheating beast too, shaggy
of fur and sharp of tooth. As the silence unspools, Erich picks up
another piece of chicken, breaks it in half, and offers Drew half. It's
an unconsciously animal gesture of reconciliation.
The smile he
offers is wry. "We seem to kinda bounce between the two, don't we?" he
remarks. "One minute we're laughing about something, and the next we're
mourning something. Guess we both carry a lot of memories around."
Drew RoscoeQuiet
settles between them once more after Drew asks if they could find
another subject. That didn't quite happen, not immediately, but at
least he didn't press the matter of her dead mate's camp-alliances and
character any further. Instead they sit in silence that existed only
within their booth, the sounds of the bar (filling up a little more
since they entered, but still not necessarily crowded) only muffled
background noise that wasn't worth making sense of.
Drew's eyes
hopped up when a hand reached to the center of the table to offer her
half of the last chicken tender, and her lips quirked into a small, soft
smile at the gesture. They continued upward from his hand to his face,
and she reached out to accept the offering. Her answer to his comment
is a quiet half-humored huff of air and to dunk the piece of chicken she
was given in the honey mustard sauce.
"Well, we only ever seem to
talk about mine. You haven't let go of too much about your own
history." A bite of chicken was taken, and after chewing and swallowing
she continued. "We do bounce back and forth. I'm okay with that. We
don't talk about your history so much as where you're going. I'm okay
with that too, if you're not comfortable disclosing, or if you think
your history's too boring for sharing. I'm pretty sure it isn't,
though."
With that said, she worried more about eating the rest of
the chicken he'd handed over to her and let him decide how he wanted to
proceed from there.
Erich Reinhardt"Well,
there's not too much to tell on my end," Erich says. "Think you already
know the highlights. I come from Nebraska. I grew up on a farm.
Everyone in my whole family's Fenrir, 'cept me. I'm like the gay
nephew, 'cept I actually have a gay cousin and he still gets invited
home for Thanksgiving."
Humor blunts that edge, but it still digs into him. Seems Erich Reinhardt knows a thing or two about being ostracized.
"I
have a sister," he adds. "Guess you don't know that yet." He thinks
another moment. "I got named a few months after my Rite of Passage, by
some Shadow Lord who ran on a few hunts with me. Another lone wolf.
Think he was a Judge, or maybe a Lightbringer. One of those
flying-solo types. That was years ago. I've been Cliath a long time.
Guess when you drift around and don't really put roots down, word of
your deeds doesn't really get around.
"That's about it, really. You want to know anything else, you can ask anytime. I'll probably answer."
Drew RoscoeWhile
Erich told his abbreviated story, Drew settled more forward than
backward, leaning in toward the blond-haired Shadow Lord, toward the
tabletop. One elbow found the table's edge and her chin settled into
her palm, fingers curling about her jawline as she heard his
bulletpointed story.
He concluded by inviting her to ask any
questions she could think of at any time. Said he would probably
answer. The Kinfolk smiled loosely, the expression perhaps the tiniest
influenced by the pint and a quarter that the petite woman had consumed.
She
was quiet for beat when he'd stopped talking, and when she spoke up it
was with a brief glance past Erich's ear, to the bar that was filling
slowly but steadily behind him. "Think we could pay and go? I'm ready
for air again, I think."
Erich ReinhardtErich smiles, a touch lazy, more than a touch fond. "Drink going to your head, Miss Roscoe?"
The
unfortunate waitress is flagged down again, but this time they have
good news for her: they want their check. Erich finishes his drink as
it's getting delivered. She'd said something about drinks being on her
tonight, but when the tab comes he won't hear of it; he puts down money
for his share all the same. He's already occupying her shed and
sometimes her guestroom, he says.
Then they're wandering out on
the street, leaving the heat and the noise of the bar behind. It's
getting late enough that the nightlife crowd is out: twenty-somethings,
thirty-somethings, yuppies, college kids, ex-frat-brothers stuck in the
mentality. Out on the street Erich shrugs into his hoodie, then glances
at Drew.
"So. Are we heading back to the sticks again?" Scurrying, he wanted to say; doesn't, though. Might sound like peer pressure or something.
Drew RoscoeThe
jest about drink going to her head was shaken off with a small grin and
by straightening up, removing her chin from the palm it rested in. "In
a warm way, not a dizzy way. More fingertips and toes, which is
probably a good thing for going outside."
The check came, and
there was a moment of polite (enough) bickering about who would pay for
what. It ended with Erich paying for his share, because he wouldn't
hear anything of it and Drew didn't believe in fighting over money. So
the check was closed, tip was left (Drew left more than the average
person might, because she always believed that any server who could
handle Garou at their table deserved a big tip), and the two headed out
into the cold.
Drew was finishing snapping the buttons over the
zipper of her coat as they stepped out, and glanced left then right
before deciding that they could meander toward the truck. She didn't
pull up her hood or put on her gloves just yet, she was still warm
enough from the bar that she didn't feel a need for such cold-weather
accessories just yet.
"We can. I was content to walk and talk.
The neighborhood's pretty, I like stretching my legs, and the company is
nice to boot."
Erich Reinhardt"Really now."
Erich's eyebrows are raised so high his surprise has to be feigned.
"No longer worried about this straying into feels-like-a-real-date
territory, I see."
He doesn't complain, though. He looks up the
street, then down. Then he picks a direction -- heads down a
sidestreet, glancing curiously into the windowfronts as they passed.
"Don't
hear that often," he adds. " 'Company is nice'. The other day one of
my tribesmen tried to recruit me for a pack by saying I can help them
look scary by standing in their midst and foaming at the mouth. I think
he meant it as a good thing."
Drew Roscoe"I
wasn't worried in the first place," Drew stated simply, and fell into
step beside Erich to walk up the sidewalk with him. There's a pause, a
glance in both directions, then the Garou selected a side street to lead
them along. Drew was more than content to go along with him, to let
him figure out what direction they would go in and maybe even how long
they would wander (up to a point).
The comment about how someone
approached him about joining a pack was answered with a small shrug from
the Kinfolk. "It's probably because you're a Full Moon, and that's all
that they're seeing of you."
Again, as was becoming Drew's habit
with Erich, she went quiet in a way that suggested she was chewing on
her words and deciding whether they should be said or not. As was also
usual, she decided it was better to speak her mind than hold back. By
this point she figured Erich'd just call her out for having something to
say and not saying it anyways. "Is it bad? I mean, that I'd be happy
to call this a date?"
One eyebrow was lifted a touch higher than
the other when she glanced up at him, the look sidelong instead of fully
forward-facing. She wasn't smiling when she asked that, probably
because the question is so serious. It could very well be a bad thing,
after all.
Erich ReinhardtShe's not smiling.
Neither is he. There's an immediate, irrepressible response - a quick
glance her way. It's not quite surprise. They're not kids; neither of
them is blind or stupid. They wouldn't be alone together nearly so much
if they didn't at least enjoy one another's company.
But her
question's an honest one. And it's a valid one. It makes his brow
knit; it makes his steps slow. He stops, less than half a block down
that quieter side-street he's led her down. There's this to be said
about hanging out with someone who can turn into nine feet of terror and
death: one worries less about wandering down dark streets at night.
One worries less about stopping there on the street to talk; muggers
become a non-issue.
"I don't know," he says. "Depends how far ahead you're looking."
Drew RoscoeDrew
didn't worry too much about dark streets at night. She didn't go out
without a gun in the back-holster she kept under her shirt in the first
place. She was very assured of her ability to draw and shoot her gun in
a moment's noticed. The typical things that people worried about in
dark places-- muggers, rapists, people insane from a cocktail of drugs
and chemicals-- the Kinfolk was hardly afraid of. She's survived much
worse, and she knew that the Much Worse could be found anywhere, so
there was no point of being afraid of dark streets specifically.
It
didn't hurt that she was there with a Garou either. She had faith in
the Ahroun, she had faith in herself to guard his back if he needed it.
They were as safe here as they would be anyplace else.
"Not
terribly far. The world changes in a month anymore. Looking too far
forward just gets...." She struggled for the words for a second. When
he'd stopped walking, Drew traveled for another step or two, passing his
side before stopping. When she came to a stand still herself, she
turned about to face the Ahroun, hands dipping into her coat pockets.
Her expression was uncertain, a touch worried, with a glimmer of some
kind of hope. Hoping she wouldn't have to tiptoe around rejection,
gentle though it may be. Hoping for affirmation, perhaps. It was rough
to pin that one down very precisely.
"It gets scary. I'm taking it day-by-day anymore, just because I have no goddamn idea what's far ahead."
Erich ReinhardtA long time ago --
well;
a long time by their standards, anyway. She's right. The world
changes day to day. A month is an eternity. So; an eternity or more
ago, he said something. Something about how under the good-little-kin
and the tough-little-Fenrir veneer lay something a little more profound.
The courage to admit vulnerability. A disarming honesty, even when
the truth was painful.
And there it is again. No bluster, no
fronting. Just truth: in her words, in her voice, in her face. The
hope there kills him; slices right through him. He smiles, but it's
lopsided and a little pained, and then he reaches out and wraps one of
those big farmboy's hands behind her head. Brings her forward until the
space between them turns into a memory.
He's almost absurdly
taller. He bends to her; inches away, and then less. A fool could see
where this is headed. They're not fools. He smells like paint, to be
frank: paint and machine grease, beer, the bar. Sweat. Maleness. And
beneath it all, a subtle, feral scent: wildgrass, treebark, earth, hot
flesh, hot blood.
"You gotta stop doing that," he says, the
slightest rough edge of laughter in his tone. "You gotta stop taking
your truth cannon to all my defenses."
Drew RoscoeA
while ago, with a conversation over Mexican food in some joint that
Erich had discovered, the Kinfolk's words found a way to strike within
the Ahroun. She displayed a kind of honesty that was strange to
behold-- it wasn't something you came across anymore. People were
guarded and distrusting, they didn't talk like her. That kind of
honesty was somehow simultaneously revealing and frail, but tall and
courageous both.
So when she does it again, admits so openly that
she's afraid of the future because she can't begin to guess what it
could hold, and that she does so facing him directly and not shying away
from her own statement, it provokes response. Erich reached across the
two-step space between them and held the back of her head and neck,
pulled forward and stooped down at the same time to bring her face
nearer to his.
He smelled masculine, like a workshop and beer and
some natural must lying underneath. The air was warmer there, that near
to him. Her hands had moved from her pockets immediately when he drew
her in, but now they hovered uncertainly between them.
You gotta stop doing that,
he said with a touch of a chuckle to his voice. He advised she needed
to stop pulling his defenses away like that. She breathed deep, nose
near to his, and one hand touched fingertips-only to his stomach. The
touch wasn't certain whether it wanted to encourage him closer or keep
him at bay. Whatever doubt that may lay in fingertips was cast aside by
leaning forward past the tiny space he'd left for her to close and
pressing her mouth to his.
There was no sense in not knowing now.
Erich ReinhardtSo Drew surprises him after all.
Not
with the touch. That just makes him look down. He can count the
number of times she's touched him on one hand. He doesn't think they
even shook hands when they met. This is no handshake; this is at once
chaste and searingly intimate. He can barely feel the contact. Her
fingers are so light. He, on the other hand, is as unrelentingly hard
of body and solid of bone as anyone might expect. The flesh beneath his
hoodie and his t-shirt has almost no give at all,
and he's
looking down to see her hand on him, he's raising his chin again, and
the truth is he was going to kiss her anyway, but he would have prefaced
it. A joke, a quip, something to blunt the edge and soothe the rawness
of the moment. Make it something that, if they decided they'd made a
mistake ten minutes later or twelve hours later, they could simply laugh
off.
She cuts him off at the pass, though. The kiss is the same
as the touch. Chaste; searingly intimate. And that's when she surprises
him -- can feel it, a tiny but unmistakable jolt all through his body
like electricity passing. It's instantaneous and then passing; his eyes
close. That contact solidifies. He kisses her back, there on that
street. It's firm but undemanding; unafraid.
Drew RoscoeIt
might have been safer to preface a test-kiss with some jibe of humor.
If nothing felt right about it, if the drive back to Browntown was
terribly awkward it would be that much easier to write the whole thing
off as an awkward mistake and go back to whatever was there previously--
the odd friendship and bouts of very honest sharing, a platonic
companionship that just seemed to work in a way that couldn't be
explained in any cementing, successful way.
Not that going back was impossible without the quip. It just might have made the moment less heavy.
Perhaps she didn't want that levity, though.
So
Erich, after half a second, leaned into her to return the kiss. She
inhaled the scent of him-- this near it wasn't the paint fumes in his
clothes and hair or the beer on both their breaths that she was worried
about so much as a smell that was very individual and natural and
impossible for someone with a human nose to break down and define past a
person's name. She didn't press deeper or further, tongue didn't sneak
into the picture.
But she did linger, several seconds or so, before
tipping her head so her forehead touched his and their lips parted. The
hand not at his stomach came up to hold the side of his neck, and she
kept her eyes closed as she asked quietly, and a touch breathily: "We
don't have to have a heavy conversation about this right this second, do
we?"
Erich ReinhardtErich doesn't
press. He doesn't try to kiss her mouth open; he doesn't throw her
against the nearest wall and maul her. It's not that he's incapable of
such things, or that he's just so much a gentleman that he wouldn't.
He's not a gentleman. Not always, anyway. Drew's seen him with some
random blonde in the Browntown bar. She's seen, even, the thoughtless
swagger in his brief interaction with Anneliese.
He's all but
accused Drew of putting on a front -- the good little kinswoman and all
that -- but the truth is she's not the only one that wears a couple
masks. There's a reason his potential-maybe-possibly packmates think
he's the frothing berserker, the muscle in their midst. There's a
reason sometimes, even with Drew, he's cocky and quicktongued, always
fending off every sign of vulnerability with a smart remark.
That's
the persona he wears very easily. It's a defense and an offense both;
an impenetrable armor of confidence and cool. What's a little harder to
understand is why, and how, she's slipped under it. It's hard to
imagine Erich stepping out of some bar with some blonde and kissing her
so gently in a backstreet. It's hard to imagine him stopping the way he
does:
leaning into her just a second after she's drawn back,
reluctant to part, and then letting her go after all. Her brow still
touches his. He licks his lips, an unconscious reflex.
What she
says makes his mouth move, a quiet huff of a laugh. "Let's not," he
whispers. His free hand comes to her waist; he moves a half-step
closer, nearly flush against her now; kisses her again. It's a little
deeper this time; his hand is a solid pressure at her side, the warmth
of his palm lost to the layers of her clothing.
Drew Roscoe
Drew didn't really know what to expect
from Erich in an intimate situation such as this. She knew that people,
Wolves especially, were different than what their exterior appearance
and demeanor would suggest. The Ahroun Shadow Lord, all muscled
shoulders and Lone Wolf arrogance, would typically be rough and
demanding according to stereotype. Drew knew better, though, than to
think she could anticipate his reactions. He swaggered in some
instances, was stoney in others. This didn't mean a gentle hand was
impossible, though.
She wasn't surprised when he let her pull
away. She would be lying if she wasn't a little surprised when he
pulled her nearer still for a second kiss, though.
His hand
grasped at her waist, finding the curve between waist and hip through
the padded material of her winter coat. His hands were big and her
frame small enough that his fingertips would come to find the edge of
something hard strapped to the small of her back. He should know that
it's a handgun, kept under her coat and shirt. A Kinfolk with her Tribe
and her history probably didn't go anywhere without one, and it was
easy to understand why.
His kiss delved deeper, lips firmer to
hers this time. Drew had just enough time to smile, the expression
wispy, before mouths met again and she was pulled so her hand was caught
between his stomach and hers. She pulled it free, letting their
stomachs and chest touch, and instead moved her arms about him, hands
both laying across his back now instead. Her mouth relaxed to his, lips
parted enough for tongue to touch lip questioningly (seeking permission, or perhaps granting it?), and she huffed a quiet little sigh that would mingle immediately with his breath.
Romance
wasn't really the impression given to anyone that might pass by the
side street. It would look much more like a man mauling some poor
stupid girl there in the shadows barely touched by dim lights from
windows above. The Rage that swept and curled in the air like puffs of
breath from mouths would drive away anyone who felt it might be their
responsibility to intervene, though. While the setting wasn't
storybook, it was secluded enough to serve for this.
Erich ReinhardtThat
smile of hers is more felt than seen. The same with his -- the corners
of his mouth abruptly quirking as his fingertips bump the unmistakable
weapon at her back. Fenrir girls, he thinks to himself, fond, a little
nostalgic. Then her mouth opens, and his thoughts dissipate.
That
first kiss might have passed as tentative. This is different. A
relentless gravity seizes him, pulls him down. His hand shifts as she
does; they move closer still. She wraps her arms around him, his upper
back so broad against her reach; his hand seems to span her back in
contrast. Tongues touch, jolting a panted breath out of him, a harsher
counterpoint to her sigh. There's a beat of pause - a searing moment in
the shadows between them, his eyes flickering open, pale blue even in
this light.
Then they close again. He goes back for more. His
hands are both at her back; he presses her closer. The way he kisses
her tells her this can't possibly be the first time he's thought about
it. There's hunger in the way he bends to her, something feral and
focused about the curve of head and neck and back. He catches himself,
manages to catch himself, before he reaches down and simply lifts her
off the sidewalk.
Turns his head to the side, a little. Like
coming up for air. His temple touches her forehead still, a steady and
heavy contact. He doesn't open his eyes as he turns back, kisses the
corner of her mouth.
"We need to stop," he whispers, "before I drag you into an alley."
Drew RoscoeHis
arms tighten, but he doesn't squeeze her too tightly. She can feel the
tension rolling for release in his back and shoulders. The way he
kissed her deep, touched his tongue to hers and panted once roughly,
suggested a hunger stirred and awoken within him. Sure, there'd been a
growing closeness, but Drew didn't quite think that he'd been thinking
this moment over at all, or anticipating it in any real way. Perhaps
this was the ignorance of femininity that has her a little surprised by
his intensity.
This isn't to say that she doesn't meet his passion
in return, though. He leaned into her, curled himself around her
smaller shape, hands seizing her back without being worried by the gun
strapped above her waistband, fingers gripping and holding her near.
When she exhaled (she had been holding her breath without realizing it),
her breath shuddered some as it made its way from her lungs and she
tipped her hips to his, letting her stomach press flush to his through
their outerwear. Reluctance be damned, she figured, and if no one was
around to scold them then why should they be ashamed?
A dozen long
moments of this pass before Erich turns his head to the side, breaking
the kiss and pressing the crown of his head to hers. She breathed deep,
lips still parted, cheeks flushed from him moreso than the cold at this
point. He whispered that they needed to stop or he'd have to find them
a dark place to be alone, and this elicited a breathy chuckle from the
Kinfolk. One hand dropped to his waist, holding just above his hip, and
the other touched the side of his face, fingers stroking from his
cheekbone to jawline before she dropped them to hold onto his hoodie
sleeve instead.
"Then we oughta stop," she confirmed, but did not
disengage entirely from him, not just yet at least. It was nice to have
him near, to feel his warmth, to feel the lick of Rage lick past and
around her-- encompassing rather than buffering within this proximity,
it seemed.
"....Maybe we should get to walking again?"
Erich ReinhardtNo
complaints from Erich when Drew doesn't draw back immediately. They
stay as they are for a moment. Then his hold on her shifts. He
straightens, pulls her against his chest, holds her like that for a
while. His heartbeat is a deep, thunderous thing.
And his rage is
potent. Far more than the typical human can stand. It burns under his
skin. It roars out from him like solar wind. As close as she is, it
surrounds and infuses her. Calls, perhaps, to some bone-deep genetic
memory in her that remembers all her past lives, all those lifetimes
spent as a mate, a kin -- as a Garou, herself, with rage like his living
in her own heart.
"Yeah." It's almost more felt than heard, that
word: the bass in his voice vibrating in his chest. "Just gimme
another minute."
Time goes by. Then, reluctantly, he lets her go.
They draw apart. His hand finds hers this time: his fingers thread
through hers. He looks at her a moment. Doesn't quite know what to do
with her, or himself. He starts walking again. No big drawn-out
discussions right now, they'd agreed, but as his blood cools inevitable
thoughts gather: her tribe, his. All those who would, in fact, scold
their faces off if they found out.
Drew RoscoeDrew
had suggested that they go back to walking. She figured it would be
good to have their feet moving again. Walking would make it easier to
peel apart, would give their feet something to do. Erich requested
another minute, and the way her cheek moved against his when the muscles
in her face formed a smile said that she would be just fine with that.
So
he had straightened up some, moved his face away from hers, and instead
wrapped one hand to the back of her head to tuck it against her chest.
She complied happily with this guidance and snuggled her head to his
collarbone, arms wrapping about his waist with a small squeeze at first,
then loose and comfortable.
They'd stand like that for a minute
before his hand found hers and they turned to start walking again. His
fingers laced through hers, and she wriggled her hand free from his, but
only so that her arm was behind his rather than in front of it. With
that detail corrected she intertwined her fingers to his once more,
thumb settling on top of his own, and fell into pace beside him.
Quiet
had gathered between the two again. The only sound they made was that
of the heavy soles of his boots and the low heels on hers thumping and
clicking faintly on the pavement. This gave them time to gather
thoughts and wonder about consequences, directions, and distances.
They'd think like that long enough to reach the next intersection before
Drew gave Erich's hand a small squeeze, gentling him out of his own
thoughts so she could have his attention to speak to him.
"I love
my Tribe. I love our ways and traditions, and I've aspired for a while
to be everything that they expect from a Kinfolk and more. But I'd be
lying if I said that I was worried enough about what they thought to
shoo you away."
Erich ReinhardtIt makes Erich
look down, quizzical, as Drew rearranges the clasp of their hands. When
he figures it out, he laughs. "Perfectionist," he teases.
Then a
quiet; each in their own thoughts. The squeeze on his hand brings his
eyes to her again, his eyebrows up in question. They lower as she
speaks; furrow a little, aching. His mouth moves a little. It's not
quite a smile.
"Didn't think for a minute you would," he says.
"That's way too cowardly for your style. If you shooed me off, it'd be
your own damn choice."
A car swishes by at the intersection. The
light turns. He steps off the curb with her, his hand firming a little
on hers. It's an odd little gesture, a touch of protectiveness as he
leads her across the street. On the other side he continues, "Doesn't
mean the rest of your tribe will see it the same way, though. They
don't much like me as it is. Doubt I'll earn any points dating one of
their purebred kin."
Drew RoscoeThey'd wait for
the light to change and give them permission to make safe way across the
street. When they stepped off the curb, Erich's large hand wrapped
more securely about her own, grasp firming protectively. She wondered
for a moment how it would play out if that protectiveness against
traffic needed to come into play, then decided, practically, they'd both
scoot out of the way of whatever asshole nearly ran them over, and then
she'd need to wait patiently while Erich dribbled the driver's head
against their steering column for a minute or two before they could move
on.
To what Drew had to say, Erich answered to let her know he
wasn't worried about her shooing him off for her Tribe so much as what
her Tribe would say and/or do when (not if, because Drew had long since
grown used to the idea of spirits watching her for her Kinsmen when they
couldn't be there to do so themselves) they figured out that a Shadow
Lord had taken interest in her-- and a traitor no less.
To
that, Drew shrugged her shoulders. She didn't seem very worried. "The
only one that's had interest in me enough to come knocking has been
Oma. And I'm pretty sure that was just when she thought she could
convince one of her boys to court me instead of his Black Fury woman.
Haven't really heard anything from any of them since."
She didn't
pay mind to where they were walking, only kept note of the street signs
so that she wouldn't be disoriented when they needed to find their way
back to her truck. For now, though, she was content to wander and talk.
"It would be nothing but hypocritical if they decided to take interest only when someone else does."
Erich ReinhardtErich
laughs - one of his quick, unrestrained laughs. "There are a hell
lotta hypocrites in the world, then. Damned if I haven't gotten
interested in something just 'cause someone else wanted it too.
"Though,"
he adds a moment later, "I guess if one of theirs is chasing some Black
Fury, they can't bitch too much if a Shadow Lord wants to chase one of
theirs. Whatever," there's a sort of decisiveness to that, "we can
cross that bridge if we get to it. We've been dating for about five
minutes. For all I know you'll be tired of me before the week's out."
The
neighborhood's getting quieter as they go, commerce transitioning to
residential. Erich takes a right at the next block. They pass a Trader
Joe's, closed at this hour. Next door's some little indie record shop,
where Erich glances in through the windows. A pair of hipsters are in
there, listening to the Beatles. Ironically. Or something.
"Hear you talking like you're not worth much to the tribe a lot, though," he says. "You shouldn't think that."
Drew Roscoe"Dating."
Drew repeated the word, and chuckled a little. "Thomas and Joe used to
tell me that our people don't date. And I couldn't ever, ever wrap my
head around how anyone's expected to go from zero to mated without any
sort of middle ground to figure things out on."
They pass by a few
shops, most closed, a few still open. They pause at a record shop
whose lights are still on to peer through the front window. There's a
small cluster of young adults there, passing a set of headphones around
and nodding and talking about whatever it was they saw. They dressed
like a bunch of hipsters, in checkered shirts, scarves, and hats that
wanted so very much to fall off the backs of their heads. Drew watched
them like someone at a zoo looking in the gorilla pen-- those kids
seemed more like distant evolutionary relatives than anything else.
Their worlds were vastly different, after all.
Erich brings up
what he perceives about Drew's sense of self-worth within her tribe, and
Drew answered by offering a lopsided smile and nudged her arm against
his to move them onward, away from the record store and along the
sidewalk.
"Oh, I'm pretty sure of my own value, and not to toot my
own horn or anything, but I'm pretty awesome." The smile turned to a
crooked grin. She was joking, but only to a point. Drew was a Kinfolk
well aware of her own worth, and she had been assured frequently enough
to believe it fully that she was valuable. "I just think that they're
too busy to really be worried about the self-sufficient Kinfolk that
doesn't cause trouble. There's already some Kinfolk Matriarchs
established here, I'm too new to challenge that in a community like this
in anyone's minds. So I'm just kinda.... shelved, I think. Not given
away, not looked at as less either. Just not needed right now."
Erich Reinhardt"Dating,"
he repeats back at her, smirking now. "You used the word first. I'll
call it 'sniffing around your skirts' if you prefer."
Nudged, he
starts walking again. There's a comfortable silence between them for a
bit as he digests what she's said. Then he crooks a grin at her. "You
are pretty awesome," he agrees. "You cook, you shoot. Though, you do
get spooked by stray cats that go bump in the night."
He nods up
at a ice cream shop up ahead. No Baskins Robbins in this neighborhood;
this is something independent and gourmet. "Let's get some ice cream,"
he says. "Make this feel like a proper skirtsniffing."
Drew Roscoe"Call it what you will. It's just words."
Boot
heels clunked quietly on the sidewalk, the sound too low and deep to
qualify as a 'click', like a high-heeled shoe would. Another bout of
quiet had settled between them, and Drew was considering whether they
should head back toward the truck or not and start driving back out into
the country. After all, it was getting a little late. Not that Drew
had to be up particularly early, but she was kind of an old maid in her
sleeping habits these days.
Erich had slowed, though, right as
Drew was thinking about putting her gloves on because the hand not
wrapped up in his was getting chilled, and brought them to a shop in
front of a small ice cream shop. It was independently owned as most
things in this neighborhood were, and probably churned on location too,
given the nature of the Du Pont Circle culture.
"It wasn't a cat,"
she stated firmly enough. "I heard metal scrape the gravel then. You
must've scared off whoever was skulking, but it sure wasn't a cat.
...But yeah, ice cream sounds good." Sure, it was around thirty-some
degrees outside, but who could say no to ice cream? She eased her
fingers loose from his and brought her hands up to her face, cupping
them over her mouth and nose. She huffed a few breaths against her
palms and rubbed them to the tip of her nose, which had gone pink and
chilly from exposure, then reached to the door to pull it open for him
to catch, as seemed to be their rhythm whenever entering an
establishment.
Erich ReinhardtDrew sticks to her
guns. That's something he's learned pretty early on. She insists that
it wasn't a cat; she gets a curious glance, and a shrug. "Well," he
catches the door, "if it comes back we'll fuck it up."
That's the comment they enter on. That's the comment he enters on: we'll fuck it up --
six-feet-something of rage and muscle looming through the door. Small
wonder the girl behind the register eyes them askance. Farther in, the
boy scooping the ice cream calls a faltering hello.
They're the
only customers here at this hour. Too damn cold, and they're far enough
off the main streets that the buzzed crowds don't wander this far.
Erich stands in front of the freezer case, debating mint chip and
butter pecan. He ends up getting both: a double scoop on a waffle cone.
"I'm getting this," he says to Drew as she steps up to order.
Drew RoscoeThe
pair enter the ice cream shop in the middle of a conversation, so the
poor young people working the counter are given more reason to falter,
because that conversation is the note of the pair of them fucking
something up. Coming from Drew, the cute little brunette with the
contagious smile, it would be funny to imagine and easy to dismiss.
Coming from Erich, though, there was little doubt in anyone's mind that
he damn well meant it.
Drew laughed in response and lifted her
chin to unzip her coat, letting it hang open rather than shrugging the
whole thing off and having to carry it through the shop with her. Erich
decided a double-scoop and mixing flavors would be best. Drew was
happy with a single-scoop in a cup of strawberry. She'd stepped up to
the counter, reaching for the debit card she'd tucked into the back
pocket of her jeans, but Erich announced both to her and the girl
working the register that he would be paying. Again, Drew didn't pick
fights over money, so she just smiled politely to the girl at the
counter and made up for the cloud of Rage that enveloped her companion
by being borderline saccharine with how sweet she was to the girl.
So Erich would pay, they'd get their ice cream, and Drew'd nod for them to pick a corner away from the counter to sit in.
"Ice
cream seems downright 1950's as far as a date night concept goes. Most
kids our age go for coffee and talk about obscure bullshit. You and
me? Ice cream and some weird amalgamation of battle stories and
supernatural politics as of tonight."
Erich Reinhardt"Most
kids our age slap a condom on and get busy," Erich retorts, "but you,
Miss Roscoe, sleep at 9:30pm on weeknights. I bet you have bunny
slippers somewhere too. So I figure ice cream's the way to go with you.
Now watch out, or I'll find us a hoedown or square dance or something
next week."
He grins, biting in to his ice cream. "Besides," he
adds, "this is literally the only non-meat thing I'll eat. And now you
know my deep dark secret."
Drew RoscoeThe very
blunt, and rather crude mention of what kids their age would normally do
is met with a huff, and Drew set her ice cream cup on the table, then
draped her coat on the back of her chair before settling down into her
seat. Without thought, she folded her right leg underneath of her when
she sat, giving herself an extra inch and a half boost to sit more
comfortably at a table that would otherwise be a smidge too high for her
forearms to rest easily upon.
"First of all, don't knock a
hoedown. They're always loud, busy, warm, and smell like straw and good
beer. If you don't know how to enjoy a good hoedown, then you're
missing out on a special part of life. Second of all, I don't like the
idea of belittling our first-founded frienship on gut-wrenches and whims
and wants."
She paused to take a small bite of her strawberry ice
cream, then continued on: "I'm not saying I know about a long run.
I'm saying if there is one, I don't wanna fuck it up."
As for his (almost) strictly meat diet: "You can't be serious that you won't eat cookies."
Because, as far as Drew was concerned, everyone loved cookies.
Erich ReinhardtThere's
a serious conversation there between the quips and parries that are
second nature to him; growingly familiar for her, too. It's that
conversation that he pays mind to first, his cone half-forgotten in his
hand.
"I get that," he says. He's relaxed in his seat, the same
way she's seen him at dinner, at the bar, at her kitchen table. Leaning
back, slouching a bit; stretched out, lazing. An animal in the prime
of his life, with nothing to fear. "I do. I'm not subtly trying to
hint anything here. Tell you the truth, some part of me's almost ...
wary of taking this beyond friendship. I don't have a lot of friends.
I don't wanna lose a friend if there's nothing but stupid, momentary
lust.
"I think there might be something more though. So." He's
been around a wide circle; he gets back to the point. "Yeah. I don't
wanna fuck it up either. And I'm willing to take it a step at a time so
we don't skid into fuckups."
Drew RoscoeDrew's
eyes hop up from her cup with a single scoop in it and find Erich's
while he takes the wide path around making his point. As he spoke of
uncertainties when it came to progressing friendship into anything else,
mentioned that he didn't have many friends, and stated finally that he
figured there was something there beyond friendship in the first place,
Drew watched his face. She'd glance to his mouth, jaw, and hair, but
land back on his eyes in the end.
He really did look exactly like
the poster boy of her Tribe. She figured that had to have something to
do with her pull toward him.
When he concluded that he was willing
to go one step at a time down this brand new path, Drew smiled and
spooned up another bite of ice cream before sticking the spoon back in
the cup and sliding it to the middle of the table to offer a bite to
him. "I'm glad we're on the same page there. 'Cause I'm pretty sure
that going to bed on the first night is some kind of death kiss to
potential. Happened before just to prove my point."
Erich ReinhardtHell
knows what his pull to her is. She's certainly not a posterboy of her
own tribe, or of his. Hair too dark for one. Complexion not pale
enough, nor olive enough, for the other. Could attribute it to some
ancestral pull: his blood and bones remembering her breeding, her scent.
Could just be what it is, though -- an attraction developing out of an
unlikely friendship.
Erich looks at her cup with a touch of suspicion as it's offered: strawberry? what is this devilry?
Then he takes a tiny spoonful, swallowing it like medicine. "Mint and
butter pecan," he says. "That's where it's at. This strawberry shit is
awful."
Then his eyebrows go flying up. "Wait," he's genuinely shocked, "did you just tell me you've had a one night stand? You?"
Drew RoscoeShe
chuckled at his reaction to tasting strawberry ice cream and dragged
her cup back in front of her. "Pecan and mint sounds weird enough to
work, I will give you that. But there's nothing awful about strawberry
anything. Especially preserves." She took another bite of her ice
cream, then grinned a little and shook her head when he inquired about
her implied one-night-stand.
"No, no, it wasn't a
one-night-stand. It was myself and a Kin, and we were friends. Got
close, and the first night we owned up to any sort of attraction we went
to bed." She sniffed a little and pushed the sleeves of her
long-sleeved shirt up to her elbows. It was warm in the ice cream shop,
an effort to welcome customers in and drive away the cold of the
encroaching winter nights.
"It's just superstition, our going to
bed didn't really ruin anything. We kinda grew apart, and then I moved
for work. I realized that Kin aren't made for one another. We're made
for you all."
Erich ReinhardtThe chair creaks as
Erich shifts in his seat. "Gotta admit," he says, "I know I'm the one
that asked, and I'm glad you can be honest with me and all, but -- it's
fuckin' weird hearing you talk about your sorta-ex that you slept with."
She
goes on -- explains that it didn't go anywhere because they grew apart.
Because something wasn't there; some supernatural draw, some
gaia-mandated attraction. Erich's eyes flick up when she says: we're made for you all.
Unbidden, the memory comes back to him -- that kiss on the dark street,
tender, then heated. He can remember how she felt against him, small,
almost dainty. A gun at her back.
His lips quirk. He looks down
at his cone and finds it melting. Lifts it, sucks a dollop of ice cream
off the side of his thumb, resumes eating it. He's crunching into the
cone now.
"I've never really been with a kin long enough to ...
feel that sort of connection. Y'know. Dated or mated or been the
significant-other of." His shoulders lift and fall under his hoodie,
which he unzips a bit in deference to the warmth in here. "Anyway.
'Nough about old flings.
"I don't eat chocolate chip cookies."
The change in subject is about as smooth as sandpaper. He knows it;
his grin says he knows it. "Think I liked 'em as a kid. But ever since
I changed, anything other than meat doesn't really agree with me
anymore. For ice cream, though, I'll take the risk."
Drew RoscoeErich
shifted about, a little uncomfortable, and admitted it was weird for
him to hear her talk about people she's slept with before. That was met
with a small grin and acknowledging lift of eyebrows, but she had
continued to explain the situation further than that. To express that
she discovered Kinfolk to be incompatible on a basic, instinctual
level. She believed quite certainly that Kinfolk were there not because
they were the babies that should have been Garou but didn't have the
spiritual link with the Other World and the Moon to finish the job.
Rather, she believed they were born to be the counterparts of the
Wolves-- lovers and partners and support all at once. They did what
Garou couldn't, while Garou worried about saving the world.
They were built for this. It's why she found that no chemistry existed anywhere else. It was biological and spiritual both.
A
confession of having not had a significant relationship with a Kinfolk
before had Drew looking curious and plainly surprised. She clearly was
interested in that revelation, but he didn't want to stay on the
subject. Respecting his wish, she finished her ice cream while he
crunched on his cone, and licked her spoon before letting it rest in the
empty paper bowl. "Sincerely? You get, like, digestive distress if
you eat anything not meat? Must have found your way closer to wolf than
man somewhere down the line."
Her eyes hop to the kids behind the
counter. They look anxious, they're chattering at one another, trying
to convince each other who should do something that neither of them want
to do. They're watching Drew and Erich, but mostly Erich, nervously.
Drew glanced to the window, squinted at backwards letters depicting
hours of operation to potential customers on the sidewalk, then stood up
and grabbed her coat. "We should let these guys close their store. We
oughta get back out home too, anyway. I was planning to be up by eight
o' clock tomorrow morning anyways-- got a project that I should get
finished for work."
Erich Reinhardt"Or maybe,"
Erich says, mock slyness, "I just figured out exactly how to get away
with eating nothing but rare steak all the time."
The angle of his
gaze shifts as she stands. He stays where he is a moment longer,
sprawled large and warm in his chair. A glance at the two behind the
counter, the boy high-school-aged, the girl half a decade or so older.
"All right," he says, and stands himself. The zipper that had come
down goes back up. He raises a hand at the storekeeps: "Thanks."
They
mutter something about having a good night. At the door, Erich's hand
is briefly at Drew's back, escorting her out. His foot catches the door
from her this time, jamming against the bottom to keep it open until he
can bump it with his shoulder. His hands, between her and his ice
cream cone, are filled.
Out on the street, he takes her hand
again. His palm is warm, on the verge of hot. Garou burn hotter than
humans; they burn brighter, live shorter lives. Gaia's shooting stars.
"I'll
walk you to your bedroom door like a gentleman," he bargains as they
start heading back, "if you kiss me goodnight and let me crash in your
guestroom again."
Drew RoscoeThey bid their
goodbyes and thanks to the kids that were there to work the closing
shift at the ice cream shop, Erich with a one-handed salute and single
word, Drew with that bright smile of hers and and apologetic mention of
keeping them open too long. With that said they were out the door,
Erich bumping it open and keeping it that way with his shoulder so Drew
could pass through after him.
Out on the sidewalk Drew took a
second to gauge which direction she had to go in to get back to her
truck. She was figuring out to just cut around the block to return to
the parking lot when the warmth of his hand closed around hers. She
responded by looking up at him, smiling, and lacing her fingers back
through his. The gesture of holding hands was small, simple, but
comforting none the less. When he touched fingers to hers, she was more
than happy to comply and mate her palm to his.
"That sounds like a
plan." She took a moment to rest her head against his arm, just below
the shoulder, then straightened up and started walking.
--------------
The
truck drive was warm and comfortable. The vehicle was new enough still
that the heater kicked on without fuss or delay. Back at the house,
Drew'd pause only to drop a few flakes of food in the fish bowl, would
putter around for conversation's sake in the front room, and be guided
to her bedroom door not long after that.
The goodbye kiss that
ended the evening was sweet and warm and lingering, and when her bedroom
door closed between them the evening left would be filled with buzzing
thoughts and warm chests and 'Oh jesus, what've we started?'
That could be left to be figured out in the next coming days.
"Nurture your mind with great thoughts; to believe in the heroic makes heroes." -- Benjamin Disrael
Monday, November 19, 2012
Letting it Lie [Erich]
Erich Reinhardt"Hey!"
Drew doesn't get very far when she hears the call behind her. All things considered -- all things being how Erich and that other well-bred kin of Fenris were, quite frankly, all but openly flirting in their pointed glances and their sly quips and their near-nauseating love/hate banter -- it hasn't been very long at all. A handful of minutes at most. Possibly enough time to exchange numbers; nothing more.
Erich catches up, doesn't say anything other than hey for a while. He's not really out of breath, so it's not that he can't talk. He's just breathing a little harder, huffing faintly as he drops in beside Drew. He still has his toolbelt on. Screwdrivers and hammers and wrenches jangle around his lean hips, like some 21st-century builder's version of a gunfighter's gear. His gloves are stuffed in his back pocket. A good hundred yards or so go by; then he glances at Drew.
"Excused yourself right quick back there," he remarks.
Drew RoscoeWhen Erich ran to catch up with Drew, he'd find her on an increasingly familiar path out of Browntown proper and along the road that led to Drew's house. She didn't manage to get too far ahead of him, just two blocks up and half a block after she turned onto the 'main road' that ran through the town. She was jogging lightly still, and did so as though she was out for an exercise jog and should be wearing jogging pants and a sweater, not the jeans and down vest and hiking boots that she was.
The 'hey!' caught her attention, and she slowed to a walk and turned to look over her shoulder toward the jangle-jangle of tools bouncing about on a toolbelt as Erich ran to catch up. She didn't stop entirely, but slowed for him to catch up. When the tall blond Garou was near enough, the Kinfolk turned and found pace with his in an easy walk along the side of the road, boots crunching rhythmically on gravel that marked the shoulder of the road (because main roads like this tend not to have sidewalks in small towns, you see).
"Well, it's cold out. If I've gotta patch windows or something I'd rather do so sooner than later-- keep the weather out of my kitchen that way. You coming back to work on the car?"
Her hands were jammed into her vest pockets. Her breathing was even, no huffing or small efforts to steady her breath after jogging. She was athletic enough, and aimed to keep that way-- that's how you stayed alive in a world like this anymore. ...Well, that, Garou, and Guns.
Erich Reinhardt"Nah. Still gotta finish shingling the roof. Just, uh..."
Erich trails off there, frowning. There's something left to be said. He doesn't quite know how to say it. Her hands are in her front pockets; after a moment his slide into his back pockets. It gives him a relaxed look. Like he's out for a walk; ambling along enjoying the night. That's not quite it, though. He's thinking, gears turning, words shifting into place and out again.
Side by side, the both of them in flatsoled boots, their heights are night and day. A full foot from her to him. Any more and it'd be comical; the stereotype of strapping Garou, dainty kin. After a while -- another twenty, thirty yards or so -- he adds:
"Look, maybe I read too much into it. Just seemed like you were dropping out of the conversation even before you took off. Weren't sure if you felt like you were a third wheel or what."
Drew Roscoe"Third wheel?" Drew glanced over and up at the Shadow Lord walking along beside her. He said that he still had to finish shingling the roof, so she slowed a little more every dozen seconds or so before just coming to a complete stop. There was no sense in walking him out of town if he just had to go back in to finish up with what he was doing. When she stopped, she turned to face him, and subsequently put her back to the vacant road. The look she gave him was one part stumped, one part humored, and one part curious.
"I was just lettin' you two jibe it out at one another. Anything I'd have to say would probably be to the tone of more refereeing. Then my phone went off, so... here we are." One eyebrow rose higher than the other, and she leaned forward just a touch, tipping her forehead forward for the sake of emphasis and humor-- she's obviously joking with him when she says: "I wasn't aware there was anything happening for me to be third-wheeling to.
"You kin-thievin', Reinhardt?"
Erich ReinhardtErich's facing straight ahead. Not stomping, no, but there's something determined in his walk. When Drew stops, he's four steps away before he realizes it.
Turns, then. She makes a joke. He stares at her, unsmiling, for just a second too long. Then his mouth relaxes just a touch. His brow stays half-furrowed. He comes back toward her, one hand thoughtlessly touching on the head of the hammer holstered at his hip.
"Like I said," he says, "I was just playing. If I start kin-thieving, Ms. Roscoe, you'd be the first to know."
He nods back the way they'd come - the potholed road back to town. "Introduced myself after I left. Told her I was a Shadow Lord, not one of her boys. We pretty much parted ways after that." His mouth slants, sardonic. "So rest easy. No need to report wrongdoings to the leadership."
Drew RoscoeDrew cracked her joke about stealing Kinfolk and poked fun, implying that he and Anneliese had a thing going on. Erich answered the joke with a straight face, boaderline scowl, and a sincere explanation of how the conversation between he and Drew's tribemate went. All was innocent and honest, so Drew didn't have to go tattling on the Shadow Lord-- or so he informed her.
Drew's reaction to his intense lack of humor was to straighten her stance back up and lift her hands out of her pockets, holding them in front of her at rib-height with her palms facing the Garou. The gesture is the classic 'whoa now, easy', but her elbows and shoulders are relaxed enough to reflect that the Kinfolk wasn't actually concerned that the situation would become heated and angry. She was in an easy-going mood, and she was used to that influencing the attitudes of the people she was with.
"Even if you did, I wouldn't go telling on ya. Way I see it, that's not my job or really my business. I ain't here to keep track of who's poking who and whether they should or not. If someone wants to get mad about it on their own, I can't and won't stop them, but I don't see a need to stir up drama that I'm not involved in in the first place."
Hands went back into the vest pockets, and Drew leaned back just a little, though her feet stayed planted firm and steady in the gravel. Her expression was a bit more cautious, a touch concerned too when she asked, "You ran after to make sure I didn't feel excluded, or to make sure I wasn't making assumptions and phoning someone up to tell 'em to? 'Cause you don't have to worry about either, you know."
Erich ReinhardtErich grimaces; he can feel the conversation derailing further and further. That hand that had rested thoughtlessly on the hammer comes up, paws back over the curvature of his skull. His hair is shorn short, but not so short that its color can't be seen -- a ripple of light deflecting where the hairs bend under his passing palm.
"What the fuck, Drew. Of course I didn't come after you to shut you up. And I know," he goes straight into this, says it like he expects her immediate protest along this vein, "I know I just snarked at you about reporting wrongdoings. I was just -- " a pause as he looks for the word, fails to find it, settles for this mediocre one instead for the third time: " -- just playing.
"I didn't think you were gonna tattle on me. I just came after you because I didn't want you to think I was sniffing around Anneliese's skirts. I didn't want you to think I was ... interested or something."
Drew Roscoe[Perception 3 + Empathy 2: You okay there?]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 2, 9, 10) ( success x 1 )
Erich Reinhardt[Here's a relatively superficial read for you: Erich is frustrated, uncertain, a bit embarrassed; feels like he's sticking his foot farther in his mouth with every passing moment.]
Drew RoscoeThe point of the conversation seemed to be missed, and in missing it Drew was pulling their words further and further off track by joking around and not understanding intent. Erich was growing frustrated, it seemed. His Rage didn't flex and snap, the moon wasn't near full enough for such minor irritants to be so inflaming. But he did scrape his hand through his short blonde hair and do a fine job of trying to explain his actions. Sure, he'd lose words and settle for something not quite as suiting in the middle of his sentence, but Drew was a willing listener, and able to read between the lines-- usually. In this case, she's more able to skim the surface than anything else.
The brown-eyed girl's expression shifted while he went on to explain that he didn't want her to think that he was interested in pursuing Anneliese. The humor was steadily leaving her pretty round face to look concerned over any other emotion. Her brows knitted together some, and she straightened her posture again, standing upright rather than leaning forward or backward anymore.
"Erich. It wouldn't be my place to judge." She says this evenly, in a low and gentle tone of voice. She could tell that Erich was off, but she couldn't put her finger on why. All she sensed was frustration and a bit of embarrassment in the way he held himself and snapped his responses initially, but failed to carry that same tone through the rest of them.
There's a moment's pause-- not hesitation, not really, and Drew took her right hand from her vest pocket to reach across and lay it on the outside of Erich's arm, just at the joint of his elbow. She still wore the tan wool fingerless gloves, but bare fingertips were warm through his shirt at least. "Is it out of line to ask why you're so worked up over this? You're fine to say so and go back to work, I'll let it be if you'd rather I mind my own damn business."
Erich ReinhardtContact draws his eye. He looks down, his face an impression of deep, furrowed brow and straight nose for a moment. Then a shake of his head.
"I don't know," he says. It's honest, and frustrated because it's honest. Erich is a lot of things. Solitary, sardonic, sometimes callous, not particularly softhearted or merciful. Just look at the way he'd laughed, earlier, when he damn near gashed some innocent passerby's head open with a flying roof-shingle. But what he's not is timid, or diffident, or shy, or uncertain.
"I wasn't," he tries to explain. "I just watched you walk off and felt bad. Which I wasn't expecting. So I came after you. And I have no idea how we got from that point to this, or what we're actually talking about, or why everything's all tangled up and sideways."
Almost snapping by the end of it. He falls silent as he hears himself. Jaw set, mouth a line. A moment passes. Then he reaches across his body and takes her hand from his arm. Even bare, her fingertips were warm. His hands are warmer, his heat fueled by something more than mere muscle and bone.
"You oughta see about that rampaging deer," he says; quieter now, but firm, "and I got shingles to install."
Drew RoscoeSomehow his face seems not only sucked dry of humor, but seems to be influencing all of the humor out of Drew's as well. He looked down at where her hand settled on his arm in an effort to close distance and indicate comfort. Hey, you can trust me so relax, said the gesture. It stayed as he went on to explain in utter honesty that he didn't quite understand the impulse to chase her down and make sure that she wasn't upset. He said he didn't mind if she pressed the topic, answered that he didn't understand why he was worked up.
The Kinfolk's face was a flurry of easily readable things. First came a melding of confusion and still-lingering concern. Then came the furrowing of a brow that accompanied serious thought. Then her eyebrows rose together, eyes widened just a little, and her lips parted some with a silent 'ohhh'.
She glanced down when he took her hand up with his and removed it from his elbow, then back up to his face when he suggested she should be on her way, and that he should be on his as well. She still held a look of realization on her face, and took a second to analyze his for a moment before simply nodding and drawing her hand back. She didn't quite start walking away though, not just yet. Rather, she let quiet linger there for a second (unless Erich snapped it away for being uncomfortable with it) before asking, seemingly out of nowhere. "Erich, you're, what, twenty-three? Twenty-four? Something like that?"
Erich ReinhardtAlmost in spite of himself, Erich smirks. It's faint, but it's there: that familiar, crooked humor that never quite brightens his face. Just takes the edge off. "Oh boy," he says. "Can't wait to hear where this one's leading."
Drew Roscoe"If you ain't answering that means you gotta be either seventeen or thirty-three and I've utterly missed the mark." Her tone has snapped back to normal-- relaxed and casual with a touch of rib-jabbing humor to match the smirks and comments that Erich spoke with. Her posture relaxed again, right hand going back to her pocket to match the left, and her weight shifted so that her weight rested more dominantly to one side than the other, causing a denim-clad hip to jut more drastically to that one side.
It's easier this way. All it takes is once icebreaker, one taste of normalcy to bring Drew back to a place of comfort and familiarity. It's easier to talk this way, with words rolling off the tongue without concern for repercussions. Much easier than tip-toeing around a Garou who's frazzled and unsure and left in a place of embarrassment from acting on impulse.
"I was askin' to have a point of reference for how often you've dealt with lady-kin before. You seem awful stumbley about it out of nowhere."
Erich ReinhardtThat quirks Erich's eyebrows right up. A beat of pause. Then they come back down, and he's smirking in earnest now, a touch of swagger in the folding of his arms across his chest.
"Drew," he says slowly, "I'm no rookie at that rodeo. I'll spare you the shocking details, but I have, in fact, 'dealt' with 'ladykin' before." And now he's just putting her on the spot on purpose. Being quite the unrepentant bastard about it, too. Maybe it's just fair play, after all. Up until a minute ago, he was the only one getting caught up in the webs of his words.
"But go ahead," he invites. "Lay your theory on me."
Drew RoscoeThere we go. That was the Erich Drew knew. Smirks, swagger, and just enough unapologetic wordplay to put someone on the spot. That made a lot more sense than the man who was half-certain of his own words at best and failing to explain effectively why he'd caught up with her to make sure she didn't think he was flirting with some other Kinfolk.
Go ahead, lay your theory on me.
Drew looked him in the eye, probably trying to read what was happening behind them, to know if she was walking into a trap or brick wall or not. Then, unclimactically, her answer came as a shake of the head.
"No." She shifted her weight again, this time taking one small half-step to the side, away from the edge of the paved road she stood so near to. In doing so she put her back to the direction of her house and her front toward the town. "I think I'll pass on that. We don't both need to be flush-faced and embarrassed tonight. I'd rather come out on top in one of our talks for once." This is accompanied by a grin that's small, but as all of her smiles are, is genuinely felt anyways.
Erich ReinhardtThere's the Erich Drew knows. A hint of savagery and a touch of swagger. A wit that takes no prisoners and sometimes strays a little close to cruelty. There's the demeanor he dons again so easily, so familiarly, as though the other Erich --
the one that gave her a fish to blow bubbles at her, the one that saw through her good little kin act to the ache that sits like a stone in her heart, the one that followed her halfway to the edge of town for no good reason at all that he could verbalize
-- doesn't even exist. When they both know he does.
Her answer surprises him; disappoints him and relieves him at once; disarms him. Makes him respect her in some odd way. She can see that, a progression in his eyes. She smiles. A moment later he returns it. It's small, too, and still a little lopsided. But this time his teeth aren't flashing. He doesn't bite with his words.
"If anyone's keeping score," he says, "I think you'd come out on top plenty of times. But I'm not keeping score, Drew." A small pause. Then an oddity, quiet, a naked acknowledgment that's probably better left unsaid. Probably best forgotten once it's said: "Thanks. For letting it lie."
Drew RoscoeThere's a train of expressions that runs across Erich's face in reaction to her declining his challenge to share her theory. There's a let down of both disappointment and relief that shows in his face and shoulders both relaxing. He's surprised, though, was quite apparently expecting that she was going to go forward into the realms of stating the obvious. When she doesn't it catches him off-guard and has him returning the small smile she'd given in the first place.
But, well, someone has to say something, right? Since Drew wouldn't, Erich did. It was simple and subtle, but they were both intelligent people. They both knew very well by now what she was refusing to say and what he was thanking her for letting lie. The Kinfolk just smiled back at him, this expression an extension of the initial one just spread wider and warmer on her face to crinkle the corners of her eyes a bit.
"Of course." She canted her head to the side and gave a small shrug up into her own jawline, making a point of being as casual on the topic as possible. "If there's a time it shouldn't lie, it'll get to its feet on its own."
And, to prevent the situation from pressing further, outside of this realm of understanding that they'd come to find themselves in, Drew took two steps backward, stepping away from Erich and starting momentum in the direction of her house. "I'll see ya around. I might need help patching up windows if that deer actually did trash the place. Not urgently, but when it comes to actually replacing instead of just patching. I'll let ya know if that's the case."
Erich Reinhardt"Well," Erich replies wryly, "you know where I spend most my free time."
She does know. It's next door to her house, after all - that little shed that has its door closed most the time now, its windows open. Work's progressing slowly, but it's progressing. The original black coat is gone now. The primer coat is laid on, and the first of several layers of white is going on, little by little. She sees him going in there to work sometimes. He doesn't always say hello when he shows up, but he usually says goodbye when he leaves.
And sometimes he doesn't leave. A couple times she's woken up in the morning to find a houseguest in one of her spare bedrooms. Erich supposes after tonight that won't happen as often anymore, if at all. Might get a little awkward.
It's already a little awkward: somehow, quite without his really noticing it, an elephant has entered the room, and they're both pretending not to see it. So much has been left unsaid that he has no idea where they stand. There's some regret in that. It's nice having her as a friend. It's nice having a friend at all. Loner like him doesn't have very many.
The silence has gone on too long. Erich nods Drew on down the long deteriorating road to her house. "Go save your porch," he says. "And Drew. I turn twenty-three next February."
Drew Roscoe"February, got it."
She notes the month in a tone that suggests she's remembering it-- probably to do something silly like present a birthday cupcake around that time. It suggests that she's already quite convinced that the Lone Wolf will be sticking around the area long enough to pass another year-mark in his life here.
"I'll see ya," she said again, and with that she turned about completely, ceasing her backward walk up the road and headed home at an easy pace instead.
Sure, there's plenty left unsaid. It was hard not to feel any kind of connection when you meet someone that manages so easily to see through your barriers to what was damn near the very core of you. As it stood, they were friends, undoubtedly. Drew would happily share a beer and a dinner with the man, and would no doubt be just as content to spend the remainder of the evening out on the porch talking all kinds of shit. The elephant was drawn to the room by that kind of simple companionship, but Erich and Drew (thus far) did a fine job of dancing around the pachyderm and keeping things normal.
Thus far, anyway.
Drew doesn't get very far when she hears the call behind her. All things considered -- all things being how Erich and that other well-bred kin of Fenris were, quite frankly, all but openly flirting in their pointed glances and their sly quips and their near-nauseating love/hate banter -- it hasn't been very long at all. A handful of minutes at most. Possibly enough time to exchange numbers; nothing more.
Erich catches up, doesn't say anything other than hey for a while. He's not really out of breath, so it's not that he can't talk. He's just breathing a little harder, huffing faintly as he drops in beside Drew. He still has his toolbelt on. Screwdrivers and hammers and wrenches jangle around his lean hips, like some 21st-century builder's version of a gunfighter's gear. His gloves are stuffed in his back pocket. A good hundred yards or so go by; then he glances at Drew.
"Excused yourself right quick back there," he remarks.
Drew RoscoeWhen Erich ran to catch up with Drew, he'd find her on an increasingly familiar path out of Browntown proper and along the road that led to Drew's house. She didn't manage to get too far ahead of him, just two blocks up and half a block after she turned onto the 'main road' that ran through the town. She was jogging lightly still, and did so as though she was out for an exercise jog and should be wearing jogging pants and a sweater, not the jeans and down vest and hiking boots that she was.
The 'hey!' caught her attention, and she slowed to a walk and turned to look over her shoulder toward the jangle-jangle of tools bouncing about on a toolbelt as Erich ran to catch up. She didn't stop entirely, but slowed for him to catch up. When the tall blond Garou was near enough, the Kinfolk turned and found pace with his in an easy walk along the side of the road, boots crunching rhythmically on gravel that marked the shoulder of the road (because main roads like this tend not to have sidewalks in small towns, you see).
"Well, it's cold out. If I've gotta patch windows or something I'd rather do so sooner than later-- keep the weather out of my kitchen that way. You coming back to work on the car?"
Her hands were jammed into her vest pockets. Her breathing was even, no huffing or small efforts to steady her breath after jogging. She was athletic enough, and aimed to keep that way-- that's how you stayed alive in a world like this anymore. ...Well, that, Garou, and Guns.
Erich Reinhardt"Nah. Still gotta finish shingling the roof. Just, uh..."
Erich trails off there, frowning. There's something left to be said. He doesn't quite know how to say it. Her hands are in her front pockets; after a moment his slide into his back pockets. It gives him a relaxed look. Like he's out for a walk; ambling along enjoying the night. That's not quite it, though. He's thinking, gears turning, words shifting into place and out again.
Side by side, the both of them in flatsoled boots, their heights are night and day. A full foot from her to him. Any more and it'd be comical; the stereotype of strapping Garou, dainty kin. After a while -- another twenty, thirty yards or so -- he adds:
"Look, maybe I read too much into it. Just seemed like you were dropping out of the conversation even before you took off. Weren't sure if you felt like you were a third wheel or what."
Drew Roscoe"Third wheel?" Drew glanced over and up at the Shadow Lord walking along beside her. He said that he still had to finish shingling the roof, so she slowed a little more every dozen seconds or so before just coming to a complete stop. There was no sense in walking him out of town if he just had to go back in to finish up with what he was doing. When she stopped, she turned to face him, and subsequently put her back to the vacant road. The look she gave him was one part stumped, one part humored, and one part curious.
"I was just lettin' you two jibe it out at one another. Anything I'd have to say would probably be to the tone of more refereeing. Then my phone went off, so... here we are." One eyebrow rose higher than the other, and she leaned forward just a touch, tipping her forehead forward for the sake of emphasis and humor-- she's obviously joking with him when she says: "I wasn't aware there was anything happening for me to be third-wheeling to.
"You kin-thievin', Reinhardt?"
Erich ReinhardtErich's facing straight ahead. Not stomping, no, but there's something determined in his walk. When Drew stops, he's four steps away before he realizes it.
Turns, then. She makes a joke. He stares at her, unsmiling, for just a second too long. Then his mouth relaxes just a touch. His brow stays half-furrowed. He comes back toward her, one hand thoughtlessly touching on the head of the hammer holstered at his hip.
"Like I said," he says, "I was just playing. If I start kin-thieving, Ms. Roscoe, you'd be the first to know."
He nods back the way they'd come - the potholed road back to town. "Introduced myself after I left. Told her I was a Shadow Lord, not one of her boys. We pretty much parted ways after that." His mouth slants, sardonic. "So rest easy. No need to report wrongdoings to the leadership."
Drew RoscoeDrew cracked her joke about stealing Kinfolk and poked fun, implying that he and Anneliese had a thing going on. Erich answered the joke with a straight face, boaderline scowl, and a sincere explanation of how the conversation between he and Drew's tribemate went. All was innocent and honest, so Drew didn't have to go tattling on the Shadow Lord-- or so he informed her.
Drew's reaction to his intense lack of humor was to straighten her stance back up and lift her hands out of her pockets, holding them in front of her at rib-height with her palms facing the Garou. The gesture is the classic 'whoa now, easy', but her elbows and shoulders are relaxed enough to reflect that the Kinfolk wasn't actually concerned that the situation would become heated and angry. She was in an easy-going mood, and she was used to that influencing the attitudes of the people she was with.
"Even if you did, I wouldn't go telling on ya. Way I see it, that's not my job or really my business. I ain't here to keep track of who's poking who and whether they should or not. If someone wants to get mad about it on their own, I can't and won't stop them, but I don't see a need to stir up drama that I'm not involved in in the first place."
Hands went back into the vest pockets, and Drew leaned back just a little, though her feet stayed planted firm and steady in the gravel. Her expression was a bit more cautious, a touch concerned too when she asked, "You ran after to make sure I didn't feel excluded, or to make sure I wasn't making assumptions and phoning someone up to tell 'em to? 'Cause you don't have to worry about either, you know."
Erich ReinhardtErich grimaces; he can feel the conversation derailing further and further. That hand that had rested thoughtlessly on the hammer comes up, paws back over the curvature of his skull. His hair is shorn short, but not so short that its color can't be seen -- a ripple of light deflecting where the hairs bend under his passing palm.
"What the fuck, Drew. Of course I didn't come after you to shut you up. And I know," he goes straight into this, says it like he expects her immediate protest along this vein, "I know I just snarked at you about reporting wrongdoings. I was just -- " a pause as he looks for the word, fails to find it, settles for this mediocre one instead for the third time: " -- just playing.
"I didn't think you were gonna tattle on me. I just came after you because I didn't want you to think I was sniffing around Anneliese's skirts. I didn't want you to think I was ... interested or something."
Drew Roscoe[Perception 3 + Empathy 2: You okay there?]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 2, 9, 10) ( success x 1 )
Erich Reinhardt[Here's a relatively superficial read for you: Erich is frustrated, uncertain, a bit embarrassed; feels like he's sticking his foot farther in his mouth with every passing moment.]
Drew RoscoeThe point of the conversation seemed to be missed, and in missing it Drew was pulling their words further and further off track by joking around and not understanding intent. Erich was growing frustrated, it seemed. His Rage didn't flex and snap, the moon wasn't near full enough for such minor irritants to be so inflaming. But he did scrape his hand through his short blonde hair and do a fine job of trying to explain his actions. Sure, he'd lose words and settle for something not quite as suiting in the middle of his sentence, but Drew was a willing listener, and able to read between the lines-- usually. In this case, she's more able to skim the surface than anything else.
The brown-eyed girl's expression shifted while he went on to explain that he didn't want her to think that he was interested in pursuing Anneliese. The humor was steadily leaving her pretty round face to look concerned over any other emotion. Her brows knitted together some, and she straightened her posture again, standing upright rather than leaning forward or backward anymore.
"Erich. It wouldn't be my place to judge." She says this evenly, in a low and gentle tone of voice. She could tell that Erich was off, but she couldn't put her finger on why. All she sensed was frustration and a bit of embarrassment in the way he held himself and snapped his responses initially, but failed to carry that same tone through the rest of them.
There's a moment's pause-- not hesitation, not really, and Drew took her right hand from her vest pocket to reach across and lay it on the outside of Erich's arm, just at the joint of his elbow. She still wore the tan wool fingerless gloves, but bare fingertips were warm through his shirt at least. "Is it out of line to ask why you're so worked up over this? You're fine to say so and go back to work, I'll let it be if you'd rather I mind my own damn business."
Erich ReinhardtContact draws his eye. He looks down, his face an impression of deep, furrowed brow and straight nose for a moment. Then a shake of his head.
"I don't know," he says. It's honest, and frustrated because it's honest. Erich is a lot of things. Solitary, sardonic, sometimes callous, not particularly softhearted or merciful. Just look at the way he'd laughed, earlier, when he damn near gashed some innocent passerby's head open with a flying roof-shingle. But what he's not is timid, or diffident, or shy, or uncertain.
"I wasn't," he tries to explain. "I just watched you walk off and felt bad. Which I wasn't expecting. So I came after you. And I have no idea how we got from that point to this, or what we're actually talking about, or why everything's all tangled up and sideways."
Almost snapping by the end of it. He falls silent as he hears himself. Jaw set, mouth a line. A moment passes. Then he reaches across his body and takes her hand from his arm. Even bare, her fingertips were warm. His hands are warmer, his heat fueled by something more than mere muscle and bone.
"You oughta see about that rampaging deer," he says; quieter now, but firm, "and I got shingles to install."
Drew RoscoeSomehow his face seems not only sucked dry of humor, but seems to be influencing all of the humor out of Drew's as well. He looked down at where her hand settled on his arm in an effort to close distance and indicate comfort. Hey, you can trust me so relax, said the gesture. It stayed as he went on to explain in utter honesty that he didn't quite understand the impulse to chase her down and make sure that she wasn't upset. He said he didn't mind if she pressed the topic, answered that he didn't understand why he was worked up.
The Kinfolk's face was a flurry of easily readable things. First came a melding of confusion and still-lingering concern. Then came the furrowing of a brow that accompanied serious thought. Then her eyebrows rose together, eyes widened just a little, and her lips parted some with a silent 'ohhh'.
She glanced down when he took her hand up with his and removed it from his elbow, then back up to his face when he suggested she should be on her way, and that he should be on his as well. She still held a look of realization on her face, and took a second to analyze his for a moment before simply nodding and drawing her hand back. She didn't quite start walking away though, not just yet. Rather, she let quiet linger there for a second (unless Erich snapped it away for being uncomfortable with it) before asking, seemingly out of nowhere. "Erich, you're, what, twenty-three? Twenty-four? Something like that?"
Erich ReinhardtAlmost in spite of himself, Erich smirks. It's faint, but it's there: that familiar, crooked humor that never quite brightens his face. Just takes the edge off. "Oh boy," he says. "Can't wait to hear where this one's leading."
Drew Roscoe"If you ain't answering that means you gotta be either seventeen or thirty-three and I've utterly missed the mark." Her tone has snapped back to normal-- relaxed and casual with a touch of rib-jabbing humor to match the smirks and comments that Erich spoke with. Her posture relaxed again, right hand going back to her pocket to match the left, and her weight shifted so that her weight rested more dominantly to one side than the other, causing a denim-clad hip to jut more drastically to that one side.
It's easier this way. All it takes is once icebreaker, one taste of normalcy to bring Drew back to a place of comfort and familiarity. It's easier to talk this way, with words rolling off the tongue without concern for repercussions. Much easier than tip-toeing around a Garou who's frazzled and unsure and left in a place of embarrassment from acting on impulse.
"I was askin' to have a point of reference for how often you've dealt with lady-kin before. You seem awful stumbley about it out of nowhere."
Erich ReinhardtThat quirks Erich's eyebrows right up. A beat of pause. Then they come back down, and he's smirking in earnest now, a touch of swagger in the folding of his arms across his chest.
"Drew," he says slowly, "I'm no rookie at that rodeo. I'll spare you the shocking details, but I have, in fact, 'dealt' with 'ladykin' before." And now he's just putting her on the spot on purpose. Being quite the unrepentant bastard about it, too. Maybe it's just fair play, after all. Up until a minute ago, he was the only one getting caught up in the webs of his words.
"But go ahead," he invites. "Lay your theory on me."
Drew RoscoeThere we go. That was the Erich Drew knew. Smirks, swagger, and just enough unapologetic wordplay to put someone on the spot. That made a lot more sense than the man who was half-certain of his own words at best and failing to explain effectively why he'd caught up with her to make sure she didn't think he was flirting with some other Kinfolk.
Go ahead, lay your theory on me.
Drew looked him in the eye, probably trying to read what was happening behind them, to know if she was walking into a trap or brick wall or not. Then, unclimactically, her answer came as a shake of the head.
"No." She shifted her weight again, this time taking one small half-step to the side, away from the edge of the paved road she stood so near to. In doing so she put her back to the direction of her house and her front toward the town. "I think I'll pass on that. We don't both need to be flush-faced and embarrassed tonight. I'd rather come out on top in one of our talks for once." This is accompanied by a grin that's small, but as all of her smiles are, is genuinely felt anyways.
Erich ReinhardtThere's the Erich Drew knows. A hint of savagery and a touch of swagger. A wit that takes no prisoners and sometimes strays a little close to cruelty. There's the demeanor he dons again so easily, so familiarly, as though the other Erich --
the one that gave her a fish to blow bubbles at her, the one that saw through her good little kin act to the ache that sits like a stone in her heart, the one that followed her halfway to the edge of town for no good reason at all that he could verbalize
-- doesn't even exist. When they both know he does.
Her answer surprises him; disappoints him and relieves him at once; disarms him. Makes him respect her in some odd way. She can see that, a progression in his eyes. She smiles. A moment later he returns it. It's small, too, and still a little lopsided. But this time his teeth aren't flashing. He doesn't bite with his words.
"If anyone's keeping score," he says, "I think you'd come out on top plenty of times. But I'm not keeping score, Drew." A small pause. Then an oddity, quiet, a naked acknowledgment that's probably better left unsaid. Probably best forgotten once it's said: "Thanks. For letting it lie."
Drew RoscoeThere's a train of expressions that runs across Erich's face in reaction to her declining his challenge to share her theory. There's a let down of both disappointment and relief that shows in his face and shoulders both relaxing. He's surprised, though, was quite apparently expecting that she was going to go forward into the realms of stating the obvious. When she doesn't it catches him off-guard and has him returning the small smile she'd given in the first place.
But, well, someone has to say something, right? Since Drew wouldn't, Erich did. It was simple and subtle, but they were both intelligent people. They both knew very well by now what she was refusing to say and what he was thanking her for letting lie. The Kinfolk just smiled back at him, this expression an extension of the initial one just spread wider and warmer on her face to crinkle the corners of her eyes a bit.
"Of course." She canted her head to the side and gave a small shrug up into her own jawline, making a point of being as casual on the topic as possible. "If there's a time it shouldn't lie, it'll get to its feet on its own."
And, to prevent the situation from pressing further, outside of this realm of understanding that they'd come to find themselves in, Drew took two steps backward, stepping away from Erich and starting momentum in the direction of her house. "I'll see ya around. I might need help patching up windows if that deer actually did trash the place. Not urgently, but when it comes to actually replacing instead of just patching. I'll let ya know if that's the case."
Erich Reinhardt"Well," Erich replies wryly, "you know where I spend most my free time."
She does know. It's next door to her house, after all - that little shed that has its door closed most the time now, its windows open. Work's progressing slowly, but it's progressing. The original black coat is gone now. The primer coat is laid on, and the first of several layers of white is going on, little by little. She sees him going in there to work sometimes. He doesn't always say hello when he shows up, but he usually says goodbye when he leaves.
And sometimes he doesn't leave. A couple times she's woken up in the morning to find a houseguest in one of her spare bedrooms. Erich supposes after tonight that won't happen as often anymore, if at all. Might get a little awkward.
It's already a little awkward: somehow, quite without his really noticing it, an elephant has entered the room, and they're both pretending not to see it. So much has been left unsaid that he has no idea where they stand. There's some regret in that. It's nice having her as a friend. It's nice having a friend at all. Loner like him doesn't have very many.
The silence has gone on too long. Erich nods Drew on down the long deteriorating road to her house. "Go save your porch," he says. "And Drew. I turn twenty-three next February."
Drew Roscoe"February, got it."
She notes the month in a tone that suggests she's remembering it-- probably to do something silly like present a birthday cupcake around that time. It suggests that she's already quite convinced that the Lone Wolf will be sticking around the area long enough to pass another year-mark in his life here.
"I'll see ya," she said again, and with that she turned about completely, ceasing her backward walk up the road and headed home at an easy pace instead.
Sure, there's plenty left unsaid. It was hard not to feel any kind of connection when you meet someone that manages so easily to see through your barriers to what was damn near the very core of you. As it stood, they were friends, undoubtedly. Drew would happily share a beer and a dinner with the man, and would no doubt be just as content to spend the remainder of the evening out on the porch talking all kinds of shit. The elephant was drawn to the room by that kind of simple companionship, but Erich and Drew (thus far) did a fine job of dancing around the pachyderm and keeping things normal.
Thus far, anyway.
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