Drew Roscoe
It's been two nights since Erich whipped
his car into Drew's driveway, said he needed to hide it (and maybe even
himself) from the police for a while, and took off. Drew'd helped to
stash the vehicle in her shed and offered to buy the things needed to
paint his car a new color.
Today, somewhere in the early evening,
Drew was out on her front porch on a wooden rocking chair, painted a
muted pea-green with a taupe cushion to make it more comfortable. She
was dressed simply in jeans, sneakers, and a loose black T-shirt with
"Murder!" on the chest in jagged white letters. She had a red zip-up
hoodie on along with a gray knit beanie to keep her ears warm. Hair was
loose, down her shoulders and back, and she was holding a bright orange
mug with a Jack-o-Lantern face on it in her bare hands, letting
whatever liquid that caused steam to pour from it warm her hands.
Yesterday
she'd come home with a truck full of car painting supplies and stashed
them away in her shed. She'd also purchased a car cover that was
assured to fit, and that had been rolled about in the dust and dirt of
the shed floor before she'd tugged it over the car to cover it up. This
did a pretty good job of making it seem as though the vehicle had been
there for a year or so now, just gathering dust and not running.
Sure,
she didn't have to go to any of these lengths. Erich wasn't only not
of her Tribe, but he'd apparently betrayed it a few years back to go to
the Shadow Lords instead. If anything, she shouldn't be helping him. She should probably have turned him away and told him to go find one of his new family members to help him out.
It's
not that the Kinfolk didn't have it in her to be that mean, rest
assured of that fact. It was just that she liked Erich, she saw a need,
and she was determined to meet it, as was her habit.
So, that
Kinfolk of Kind Gestures sat on her porch, rocking in her chair like she
were some seventy year old woman, sipping at her mug and listening to
the dying song of the crickets struggling against the autumn night's
promise of frost.
Erich ReinhardtErich, social
butterfly that he is, has yet to meet a single other Shadow Lord in this
city. Or well. That's not true. He met one a couple nights ago,
while getting out of a ticket in the worst way possible. Just didn't
know he'd met one, is all. But the point is: would Erich have gone to a
tribesmate with his stash-a-car issue, had he known of one? Possibly.
Probably. Or maybe his car would still be here, draped under a car
cover that looks older than it is, awaiting a new coat of paint.
Hopefully not bubblegum pink.
It's
been two days since Erich hid the incriminating evidence away. He's
been on foot the whole time; today's no different. Drew goes a-rocking
on her porch like a woman three or four times her age, sipping hot tea
or hot cocoa or hot something on this large-mooned autumn night. It
might be gradual; it might be abrupt: sooner or later, she feels it -- a
second presence, a distant tremor of rage. A sense of no longer being
alone in her own territory.
Then the long dying grass that borders
her driveway parts. A wolf peeks cautiously out of the foliage: just a
long muzzle and a broad ruff; thickly furred and muscled shoulders.
The pelt is a solid iron-grey. The eyes are frosty blue, so pale as to
nearly be colorless. His ears swivel. He sniffs the air. Then he
vanishes back into the grass.
A moment later he bursts out,
loping, the grip of a familiar duffle bag seized in his teeth. His
claws tick as he hits asphalt, scrabble against wood as he bounds up the
steps of her porch.
The sound changes all at once to the heavy
thump of work boots as he shifts. Erich takes the duffle bag out of his
mouth, drops it on the ground, and offers Drew a rueful, crooked smile.
"Took me a couple days to get enough work to cover what I probably owe ya for supplies. Anyone come sniffing around here?"
Drew RoscoeDrew didn't know
that Erich was coming back tonight, but she did know that he was coming
back some night soon, and that could very well be tonight. So she was
casually on the look out, expecting but not knowing. She was taking
another sip from her Halloween-themed mug when the untrimmed grass that
marks the end of her yard and the start of the wild field-space that
hugs either side of her house (trees to the back, though, dense and
untamed) shifts, bristles, then parts.
She is a fairly alert
woman, and the rustling might have gone unnoticed had the sensation of a
predator lurking nearby not welled up in her chest. She'd stopped
rocking, ceasing the very quiet 'creak' that came with the motion, and
stared out toward the road for a second before the rustling caught her
attention and she looked left instead, just in time to see a steel-gray
wolf poking its head out from the tall grasses.
She doesn't launch
to her feet and go for a gun, and she may be one of the only rural
people who would abstain from doing so. Rather, she just watches as the
wolf, with a duffle bag between its teeth, lopes across the length of
her yard and scuttles up her porch. It's with the kind of muted
interest that comes when you already know what's going to happen that
she watches when the big gray wolf turns into a big blonde man.
"Nope,"
is her answer, simple and easy, to his question as to whether anyone's
come asking about him. "There's no reason for any cop from the city to
think you know me. Any authority figure around here's either got their
hands full with reconstruction, or, again, has no idea we even know each
other." She shrugged some, took a last drink from her mug, and set it
down on the small round end-table beside the chair (painted to match, by
the way) and rose to her feet.
"Shall we get down to business?"
Erich Reinhardt"Good," Erich says. "Didn't see any wanted posters or anything either. Though I guess in this day 'n age I wouldn't."
She
gets up. He takes a step back to give her room. It's very nearly his
moon in the sky; the fullness of it is under his skin, leaves him
restless, a crackling presence. Down to business, she says, which he
instantly interprets as money business.
"Yep." Erich
reaches for that battered wallet he keeps in his back pocket. Whatever
'work' he gets is obviously piecemeal, and obviously pays in cash: the
billfold is stuffed with rumpled small bills, fives and tens. "How much
do I owe you? And what color'd you get?"
Drew RoscoeErich
has the good graces to step back and give the Kinfolk a little space
when she stands up. He's very aware of the moon. So is Drew, but they
are aware in different ways. Drew is aware because it's a necessity in
her world to know these things-- how you talk to someone may change
depending on whether the sky was dark or bright at night-time. Erich
was aware in his chest, his belly, his bones. He felt it bubbling
within, and Drew felt that as a radiant heat from the force of the
Ahroun's very being.
But she didn't react to it, not in any real
or visible way. Her will was strong, her experience great. Rage was an
intense thing, but she'd learned to tolerate and exist around it.
Her
eyebrows lifted, curious, when he reached for his wallet while agreeing
with her. She shook her head and waved her hand. "Couple hundred.
I'm not expecting full reimbursement, just... whatever you feel is
appropriate. I don't want your whole damn wallet, leave enough there to
take care of yourself."
She walked past him, down the porch steps
and along the sidewalk, headed toward the shed. Her hands went into
her hoodie pockets, and she spoke clearly enough to be heard as she led
the way. "I went with white. It's common, inconspicuous. No one
really pays too much mind to white cars, they don't remember them the
same way they do yellow or red ones."
Once to the shed, she pulls
open the door, waits for him to come into the shed, and slides it closed
partway-- leaving the door open a couple of feet so there would be
ventilation, but not enough room to give anybody driving by a show of
what is going on within the shed. From there she pushes the sleeves of
her hoodie up to her elbows and grabs one corner of the cover on the
car, and pulls it away with the same whipping motion that's associated
with throwing a comforter over the bed, or playing with the parachute
during gym class in elementary school.
"The stuff's over
in that corner," she advised and gestured to the wall that had all of
her tools and lawn equipment set away against it. He'll easily be able
to see the new supplies set on and before the workbench that came with
the shed, old and wooden, but sturdy.
Erich Reinhardt"White?"
Drew can see him processing this; he's too polite, or at least too
aware of the fact that he owes her one, to complain. "Well, maybe I can
put some black stripes on it in a couple months.
"And it's not
hard to take care of myself. I'll pay what I owe. And I was taught
that by my mama, so don't give me any 'that's not how we Fenrir do
things' bull."
He follows her as she heads down to the shed. She
walks with the easy assurance of someone who owns the land, the
buildings on it. Erich can't help a glance around -- just in case
someone was watching. Spying. Getting ready to tattle. Nothing but
shadows and crickets answer his suspicion, and so he ducks into the shed
with her, feeling around until he finds the light switch.
Drew
whisks the cover off. Erich helps, unsnagging it from a side mirror,
waving dust out of the air. Then while she folds the cover he goes over
to the workbench, inspecting the supplies: primer and paint, air
compressor and paint gun. "Nice. Thanks again." He tries to be subtle
about it, at least: he sets the money down next to the supplies, pinned
in place by a nearby staple gun or something. "You have old newspaper
or anything like it?"
Drew RoscoeThere is an
insistence, not pushy but certain, that he will pay her back the full
amount, and he says that his mother taught him that so she can't call
him out on that not being the Fenrir way, or something silly like that.
Her answer to this is a rolling shrug of one shoulder and a small grin
flashed for him, and the topic of money is left there. Apparently Drew
doesn't hold cash too close to her chest-- as long as she can keep a
roof over her head and her fridge full she's pretty much happy, it
seems.
Well, as far as money goes, anyways.
So they're to
work-- Drew was folding the car cover up and Erich was inspecting the
supplies available (and tucking a small pile of bills under a staple gun
so that they don't flap away or get lost in the shed when strewn by
small animals that no doubt nest in there). Drew put the cover off to
the side, tossing it into the dust against the side wall. She wasn't
careless to the point of wadding and throwing the cover, she made sure
to keep the inside of it clean as possible-- it was the outside she
wanted convincingly dirty.
"Newspapers? ...'eh... Yeah, I think
there's something around here." And the Kinfolk is off, joining Erich
on the side of the small-ish shed/two-car garage that isn't filled up
with muscle car. Tucked away on top of one of the shelves that lines
the wall was a series of medium-sized cardboard boxes. Drew analyzed
for a moment, selected one, and went up on her tippy-toes to reach. One
hand held a lower shelf's edge for support, and the tips of her fingers
nudged at the bottom of the box that hung over the shelf, nudging it
until it was loose enough to seem like it was going to fall right on her
head.
She seemed like she knew what she was doing, though. She was making casual conversation while doing this.
"You
figured out where you're going to stick around here, yet? Like, in the
city or out here? You've seen Browntown and what it's been through.
If you're seeking influence, I'd say you should probably stick around
here. Help rebuild, all that."
Maximilian KriegThe
short man walks the shadows of the small town. Tonight he has elected
to forgo carrying his usual load of duffel bag and gear. He moves light
of foot. Perhaps there is a small bulge under his camouflage jacket
where a short weapon resides. He slowly picks his way through the rubble
of the residential area investigating something. His nervous eyes
constantly aware and searching.
Erich ReinhardtThere's
something nefariously amusing about watching a rather small woman
attempt to reach for a very large box on a very high shelf. While Drew
strains -- confidently, one must admit -- to get the newspapers down,
Erich stands over by the workbench. Nominally, he's inspecting the
power sander. Actually, he's watching Drew, repressing a smirk. It's
only when she gets the box out far enough that any second it might tip
over and give her a concussion that Erich sets the sander down with a
thunk.
His approach is as tangible as a heat wave. "Okay," he
says, brushing her aside, "stop. Move over before you kill yourself.
Who put this up there in the first place?"
He gets a solid grip
on the box and tugs it out from the shelf, lowering it smoothly to
waist-high before letting it drop the rest of the way. It smacks on to
the floor, a layer of dust puffing up. Erich starts unfolding the
newspapers, tucking them around the wheels, taping them over the chrome.
"I
look like the type to seek influence?" He's smirking again. "Probably
keep drifting, same as I always have. More work in the city. Easier
to rest my head out here without getting arrested though."
Maximilian KriegA
Stealthy sneak maneuvers out of the town in the cover of night. He is
sure that evil Illuminati company has blanketed the small town with
their infestation of the plague that will be the demise of the
citizenry. He deftly moves through the underbrush and the shadows to
make his way out of town.
Another successful trip to Browntown
unscathed. He should probably not press his luck. But, he certainly had
not seen that kin in a few weeks and should at least spy on her. No need
to bother her. He could just watch through the windows for a while to
make sure she was okay and not entertaining any questionable guests.
Drew RoscoeErich
lets the petite woman be capable for a minute, taking the same sadistic
joy out of watching her reach for something tall that anyone over 5'8"
does. She pretends not to notice, and actually doesn't really care (you
grow up on the smaller side and you'll get used to that kind of thing),
and just keeps on nudging the box further and futher out until Erich
can see it balancing precariously, about to slide off the shelf and onto
Drew's head.
It's at that hanging moment that Erich interferes,
brushing her aside and reaching out to catch the box as it slides. Drew
didn't sulk about it, but rather shifted out of the way only when Erich
was right near her side, not wanting to let the box fall and break on
the floor and strew papers and goodness-knows-what-else all about the
shed. She'd step a foot or so away, giving him space to smack the box
onto the ground, then lean down to help grab old yellowing newspapers
and magazines and pin them over things that he didn't want to get paint
on.
"The box came with the house. I poked around them and figured
out the stuff on the top shelf was probably the 'I'll get rid of this
someday' graveyard for packed things."
As far as influence goes,
though... "A little bit, yeah. Not in any big, sweeping, obvious way.
But I think you would like your word to carry some amount of weight. I
mean, doesn't everyone? ...And that's always the case. It's typically
easier out in the wilds, but there's more that needs doing in the
city. ...But these days, with that Fog and whatever the fuck fucked
Browntown up..." She shrugged helplessly and went back to pinning
papers to cover tires and windows and headlights....
......and
outside the shed a spy lurked. A small man, built for the forest, built
for travel and stealth and capability in ways that the muscle-bound
couldn't fully understand. He'd discover Drew's little one story house
unperturbed, with the truck parked in its same place in the driveway as
always. The porch light is on, as is the floodlight over the shed.
There's a light on in the front window, but the blinds are always drawn
here, so it's rough to peek inside and determine what's happening.
The
land is pretty quiet, though, so it's not too rough to figure out that
there are people moving and talking in the shed at the end of her short
driveway, kiddy-corner to the back of her house.
Erich ReinhardtIf
Max is here looking for questionable guests, Erich might well qualify
for that. A male, a Garou, not of the Fenrir tribe -- and standing
rather close to Drew. At least for a moment. At least until that
precarious box comes thudding down on the floor.
They part, then.
They work in the manner of people accustomed to working with their
hands, without complaint, because if you don't do it yourself no one
does it. Crouched down to tape newspaper over the headlamps and the
grille, Erich raises his head to shoot a dubious glance Drew's way. "
'Came with the house'? You know there's probably a severed arm at the
bottom, right?"
He's good at this whole masking thing. Keeps a
roll of tape around his forearm, tapes and tears one-handed while
holding the newspaper in place with the other. Probably did this
before. Maybe on this very car. Drew's relegated to tire-shielding
duty; the more precise, challenging work of glass and metal Erich
handles himself, with surprising swiftness.
A shrug answers her
when she says everyone wants their word to carry some weight. "Maybe.
I dunno. Truth is I don't really talk much to people. I mean, not
like this, just talking. Serious talking. Planning-shit or
deciding-shit talking. I mostly just make up my own mind and do my own
thing. Worked for me so far. Toss me another stack of newspaper, will
you?"
Maximilian KriegSome could mistake the
little Fenrir for a voyeur or peeping Tom. But, he was just looking out
for the tribe. The tiny man was linking in the darkness trying to make
sure that he would not get caught by the black helicopters or satellites
that were certainly paying so much attention to the place. It really
was dangerous for him to be there. He could not get it out of his head.
But, those prophetic dreams he had included her. He would hate to have
to cut her zombie head off and watch her twitch as her decapitated body
flung itself off the small cliff.
He pushed the thoughts of that
out of his head as he made his way to a vantage where he might see into
the shed from a great distance. Perhaps she was not doomed and he could
still save her, without sacrificing himself of course.
Drew RoscoeDrew
had been stuck on tire duty, and she was perfectly fine with that. She
was happy to work with her hands, but that didn't mean that she was
adept at every job that involved manual labor. She didn't actually know
how to paint a car, she was just figuring it out as she went along.
Covering the parts that you didn't want to get covered in paint just
made sense, and the fact that Erich had a much better idea of how to go
about a job like this made it easy to let him take lead on the project.
It was his car, after all.
So, as they worked, they made small
talk, and it was friendly and innocent enough (peeping ears could
confirm that in voice tone). She went to fetch more newspapers and
magazines to tear pages from to supply what was needed and leaned down
over the box, pausing only to glance back at Erich, then look into the
box and shuffle the contents about. "Nah, no body parts. They would've
rotted the bottom of the box, and probably the shelf too." One way to
kill a silly joke is to suck the humor out of it entirely by pretending
you didn't realize it was a joke in the first place.
An armful of
old yellowed newspapers was gathered up, then split into two. One pile
was dropped by Erich's knees, then Drew moved to his side to start
covering the next tire, comfortably setting her knees in the dirt,
unworried of how it may sully her clothes. "Didn't think doing your own
thing really ever worked out for pack animals. I mean, that's kinda
what I've seen anyways. My Boys were sort of like that, but got drawn
to each other. It's bound to happen sometime, Erich, ya can't be
lonesome forever." Note, the 'ya' in that sentence was intended in the
general sense, not just him specifically. The tone implies that, along
with the rounding of her shoulders to indicate that she might well be
talking about herself as well.
Max is snooping, assuring the
visions (spirit-conjured or sickness-conjured, it's rough to be too
certain sometimes) were not true, not put into play just yet. He finds
an angle off of the gravel driveway, not too far from the tall grasses
that marked the edge of Drew's yard, to peer into the gap left between
the shed door and its place when closed. He'll see a black muscle car,
partially covered with newspapers, but not much movement from where he
is. Just shadows off the dim yellow lights within the shed, and the
rustling of paper and indiscernable words on a pair of voices, one male
and one female, from within.
"....I named the fish. It's The Wugly Ump."
Maximilian KriegClandestine
whispers in an old shed. Certainly it could not be a meeting of the
Illuminati slaves trying to influence the kin. He crept and belly
crawled closer. He had to be certain they were not injecting her with
the zombie serum. Why did it have to be him. He could just walk away.
She was probably dead already anyway. He'd lay in ambush for them when
they came out of the shed. That's what he would do.
He might not
be able to save the girl but he could avenge her untimely death. Fenris
would be proud of him. What were they talking about in there. He had to
know....
Erich Reinhardt"Ew," Erich says of
rotting limbs in cardboard boxes; doesn't seem terribly committed to
being grossed out. "And that's a ridiculous name, even if it's for a
fish.
"You know what I think though, Drew?" He slaps a last piece
of tape down, anchoring a last fold of newspaper, and sits back on his
heels. "I think you're projecting. At least to some degree. I mean,
you're really concerned about whether or not I integrate into Garou
society, and I'm sure a good part of that is just you being you. Caring
and worrying and stuff.
"But that's not all of it, is it? I'm
not the one who's brought up how lonely he is just about every time
we've talked. You are. I think you're worrying about yourself as much
as me. I think you're the one that really misses the community." A
pause; a shrug. "Sorry for being so blunt."
Drew RoscoeThe
Kinfolk paused in her work when Erich started telling her what he
really thought about 'loneliness' and 'joining the community'. Brown
eyes were focused on her hands, paused up in the passenger back tire
well, but they didn't stay still the whole time he spoke. Rather, they
started again, tearing a page from an old National Geographic magazine
and pinning it properly in place. She kept working, but more slowly
now.
When she answered him, it was with the same note of mild
shame that came when a parent calls you out on trying to keep a secret
from them. "Well, I can't argue that. It sounds pretty much right."
But, again, comes that loose shrug of her shoulders and she's tearing
another page out of the magazine, very focused on looking at her hands
rather than glancing over to the Shadow Lord crouched about the car
along with her. "Not a lot to be done about it, though. When you're
new to a small town like this you gotta earn your place in the
community. It takes time, I guess."
Not that it's really any
easier by the fact that she spent most of her time working from home,
and didn't get into the town very much especially now that half of the
buildings were burnt or destroyed and the general store was closed up.
She had to make runs into the city for things she needed anymore, and it
was becoming vastly inconvenient and time-draining.
And outside,
still unnoticed by a Kinfolk that was confident in the rural seclusion
of her property, a man lurked and scooted closer to the shed, straining
to know what was happening inside. Words don't become any clearer, but
he may be able to remember Erich's voice as well as recognize Drew's.
She's in there with that Shadow Lord, it seems. Does that make him one
of the Illuminati?
Maximilian KriegSilence of
night is never silent. The sound of crickets and night birds was as loud
as a concert when you were straining to hear a conversation just out of
ear shot. Though he did hear her voice and the voice of the Shadow Lord
that would be punishing himself for his poor decision of tribe. He
scooted a little closer to the shed. He took refuge under a bush.
That
little sawed off shotgun of his slipped out of his jacket and readied
to assault any Illuminati scum that came out of the shed. The Garou and
Kin were safe. Unless of course he heard their plans to aid the Zombie
Apocalypse. You never know who has been converted to the schemes of the
conspiracy to ruin the world with the Wyrm's Zombies.
Erich Reinhardt[i'ma roll percep+alert! feel free to counterroll for dex/stealth.]
Dice: 4 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 10, 10) ( success x 1 )
Maximilian Krieg(stealthy midget:
Dice: 07 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 1, 2, 5, 6, 10) ( fail )
Drew Roscoe[Perception + Alertness, 'cause why not]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (6, 7, 8, 9, 10) ( success x 5 )
Erich Reinhardt"That's
good," he says of the tire. She's distracted by conversation; she's
been remasking the same wheel over and over, a little slower every time,
until he reaches over and gently plucks the last newspaper out of her
hand.
"Gotta ask though. Who exactly are you trying to get accepted by? And what exactly counts as accept-- "
Erich pauses mid-sentence, cocking his head. Frowning. "You hear something?"
Maximilian KriegHe
crouches in the bush. He freezes in place as he can't hear the words
but he notes the change in tone. Had he stumbled on them at a moment
that would incriminate them? He could not ambush them. He would have to
hide and get away to warn others of their treachery.
Drew RoscoeShe's
still papering a tire that doesn't need it anymore, and Erich pauses
this by reaching over, slow and aware of the impact that his Rage
combined with sudden movements can have on a soul, and takes the next
sheet of newspaper out of her hand. It's at that point that she stops
pretending she forgot how to look people in the face and turns her
attention back onto Erich directly. Her eyes search his when he asks
who she's trying to be accepted by, but not like she's trying to find an
answer within blue, but rather searching for intent.
But this is
interrupted, for both at the same time. Noise rustles up from outside,
and Drew's brow creases. Erich interrupts himself a word and a half
later, then asks quietly if she hears something. Her head turns so that
her right ear is pointed toward the door, then further so that she can
peer outside. There's a pause after Erich's question before she
answers, her voice low and cautious.
"There's a man out there.
Sounds like he's creeping, can hear him dragging, I think that was
gravel and metal. Like, not clothing metal, but hollow, like a... gun
barrel." Her tongue ran over lips that felt dry very suddenly, and she
slowly flexed her calves and thighs to bring rise smoothly and gradually
to a stand, more breathing her words than speaking the, she was making
such an effort to be quiet. "There's a man out there with a gun. Not a
pistol, but a rifle or shotgun or something."
Erich ReinhardtErich probably doesn't
really believe the in-depth analysis Drew gives of the noise outside.
All he heard was a scuffle. Maybe a man. Maybe a raccoon. He
crumples up that scrap of newsprint in his hands, drops it on the floor.
"Stay here," he says. "I'll check it out."
His
stride is long, his steps surprisingly light. Passing the workbench,
he pulls some random tool off the wall -- a hammer, maybe, or a trowel
for the garden -- then eases the shed door open just wide enough to slip
out. The door closes behind him and latches gently.
Erich Reinhardt
Once the door shuts Drew doesn't
really hear Erich out there at all. The occasional footstep. A
scuffle. Mostly silence, and the sounds of the night. A few minutes go
by. Not very long in the grand scheme of things. Might seem longer,
though, for a girl alone in a shed, three miles from the nearest town
and much, much more than that from any sort of modern city. Isn't this
how horror movies start?
Five minutes later the shed door bursts
open. Erich comes back in. He doesn't bother to be quiet this time,
lets the door bang shut.
"Nope. Didn't see anything," he says.
"Probably a cat. Maybe the town drunk at worst. Think you're just
jumpy on top of being lonely, princess."
The hammer he'd borrowed
gets tossed back on the workbench. It clatters. Erich swoops the power
sander back off the floor where he's left it and starts hunting for an
outlet.
"It's about to get pretty noisy in here," he says, "And
it's really a one-man job. You can stay and watch if you want, but if
you're bored go on back to the house. I'm gonna try to get a good start
on sanding so I can get the primer coat done by tomorrow. I'll come in
later, if your offer to crash in the guest room's still open." He
smirks, "Check under your bed for boogeymen and all that."
Drew RoscoeErich
volunteered to go look for whatever was making sounds that they'd both
heard, and instructed Drew to stay put. Ordinarily she'd argue, but the
closest firearm she had was out in the truck, and without those she
would be of no help. Sure, without a gun she was capable enough-- she
could break noses and knew all of the tender parts of a person to hit,
but all of this was only enough to inconvenience an attacker long enough
for her to start running fast and hard, which was something she was
much better at than fist-fighting.
So Drew'd stayed in the shed,
standing up against the car, listening and waiting. A few minutes had
passed, and in that time Drew had wandered to the other side of the shed
and picked up a particularly heavy wrench and waited there instead of
right in front of the sliding shed door.
Sooner than later, Erich
returned with a dismissive air about him, and Drew was sure he hadn't
found anything before he had a chance to say so. She settled the
weight of the wrench back on the workbench, but paused after a second of
thought and picked it back up when he'd gone on to explain that the
next steps were really a one-man job and she'd be doing nothing but
getting her ears assaulted by the sound of a sander against a car if she
stuck around.
"I know damn well what I heard," she told him, and
did so with enough conviction and sincerity that it would be rough for
Erich not to at least wonder for a second if he'd searched carefully
enough, if perhaps something didn't slip away under his nose. She
hefted the wrench to hold with her elbow bent, ready to wield the tool
as a weapon at a moment's notice.
"I'll see ya inside the house.
It's more secure in there anyway." She confirmed with that statement
that her initial offer for him to use facilities and the guest room
still stood firmly where it had been made. "Any boogymen that might be
hunting me ain't gonna be under my bed. They're gonna be out my window
or on the Other Side."
With that, Drew dismissed herself from the
shed, pausing to glance about the property cast into sharp shadows and
bright lights by the shape of the landscape, the buildings, the moon and
the floodlight all. As content as she could be with what she found
outside the shed, she closed the door all but a foot behind her and made
her way up the driveway and sidewalk to the front of her house, leaving
the door unlocked so that Erich can come in when he's done in the shed.
Erich ReinhardtFor
a Shadow Lord, Erich isn't terribly good at lying. He's not even very
good at keeping his thoughts to himself. Right now, it's obviously to
all and sundry that he thinks Drew heard a raccoon or a cat or something
and is well on her way to scaring herself into apoplexy. She insists
she knows what she heard -- the smirk on his face fades a notch.
Then
it's back. "Want me to walk you to your door?" he says with such
overwhelming sincerity that it must be mockery. She probably doesn't
accept. He turns on the sander as she heads out, and she can hear the
muffled machine noise through the thin walls of the shed.
He
watches her through the window, though. Makes sure she gets back to her
porch unharassed by things that go bump in the night. And, much to his
not-surprise, she does.
Erich's out there for a good
three, four hours. He'll probably be out in her shed all day tomorrow.
If Drew opens her door she can hear him out there -- the steady whining
roar of the power sander changing timbre as he runs it over different
surfaces, changing contours. Occasionally it stops for a little while.
Then it starts up again.
There's some music around 9pm, 10pm.
Erich rolls down his car windows and plays it off his car stereo.
Around 11 it shuts off; he doesn't want to drain his batteries. Then a
half-hour after that the constant whine of the power sander spins down
at last. Another five, ten minutes of clean-up after that.
It's
nearly midnight when his bootsteps tromp up the porch. She left the
door unlocked, but he doesn't assume that. Wouldn't expect that, not
with mysterious boogeymen out in the dark. He knocks.
Drew RoscoeThe
offer to be walked to the door had been refused with a small shake of
the head, and Drew had made it up to her porch unscathed. She'd walked
quickly with a forced confidence that came from walking alone through
shady parts of Chicago to get home at night from whatever escapade she
may have been off on on any given evening during that time in her life.
Time
enough had passed, and Erich had been hard at work on his car, filling
the property with the sounds of mechanical equipment and thumping bass
that carried heavier than the treble could ever dream to do. Come about
midnight (just shy of) the Shadow Lord climbed the front porch with
heavy boots and knocked on the door.
The answer came quickly enough; a call of: "It's open."
Inside
the house, Erich will find the place pretty much the same as last time
when he'd stepped inside. The only difference is now there's that beta
fish he'd brought her on the end table beside the door, in a little bowl
decorated with brightly colored pebbles, a sprig or two of fake
seaweed, and a little castle for him to swim in and out of. Looking
deeper into the house he'd find Drew at the dining room table visible
from the front door.
She's since changed into a pair of black yoga
pants, a white tank-top and a hoodie that wasn't as dusty as the one
she'd been wearing in the garage-- this one simple, black, a little
moth-eaten, just some old thing she'd wear around the house for comfort
and convenience. Her hair's been washed and has mostly air-dried by
now, leaving it in humidity-sprung waves that hung down her shoulders,
tucked behind her ears to stay out of her face. She's been drinking a
beer (it's in front of her, half gone, a bottle of Corona) and reading a
book about nothing important.
"There's stew on the stove for ya
still, and buns in the bowl next to the stove, all covered up with the
hand towel. Help yourself, betcha worked an appetite up." Her eyes had
lifted only briefly from her book to confirm that whoever stepped
inside was the tall blonde-haired blue-eyed man she'd welcomed into her
home and not whoever she was positive she heard skulking about. Once
assured that her visitor was Erich, she'd looked back to her book.
Erich ReinhardtIt's
Erich all right: blond, blue-eyed posterboy of the Fenrir that he is.
He's picked his duffel bag up from where he'd dropped it on her porch.
It's slung over his shoulder. He has a sleeping bag too, coiled up
under his arm.
"Lock your doors at night," he tells her, dropping
his stuff with muffled thuds and clangs in the entryway. He catches
sight of the fish -- what'd she name it? something awful, he remembers
that -- and bends to peer at it. Gets flared at. Laughs under his
breath and straightens, glancing at Drew's feet to see if he should take
his shoes off.
Decides on yes, regardless. His boots are muddy.
His eyes track automatically toward the kitchen as she mentions food.
A half-grin pulls at his mouth, and he comes across her living room on
stockinged feet.
"It's like you don't know what to do with
yourself if you aren't offering me hospitality," he says. This time he
doesn't turn it down: she hears him lifting the lid on the pot,
sniffing. "Where do you keep the bowls?"
Drew RoscoeA
glance under the table would show that Drew is barefoot, no socks or
slippers or anything. She's got one foot trailing just shy of resting
on the floor, big toe able to touch tile but not much more, and the
other leg was curled up underneath her rump to allow for taller sitting
at the kitchen table. Erich figured that regardless he should probably
not track mud through her house and removed his boots, chuckling quietly
at the beta when it flared at him upon making eye contact.
"Lock
it behind ya, then. I would've if I didn't expect you to be coming in
later. Besides, you're on the property. If you heard me havin' to fire
my gun I'm pretty sure you'd come see what's up. You full moons love a
good fight, especially when the moon's this close to bein' full as it
is." She'd looked up from her book again when answering his warning to
lock her doors at night. There was a second of contemplation, then she
dog-earred the page she was on and closed the book over, laying it face
down so that the back showed small script offering up a summary and some
quotes from people who could be important in some circles vouching for
the content.
"Well, it's better to be good to your guests than to
ignore 'em. This is my home, not a motel, I'm not gonna just leave you
unfed and unfamiliar with the place." As for the bowls, she nodded her
head back toward the kitchen proper, where there were cupboards and a
sink and appliances. "They're just to the right of the sink. Ya may
want to salt and pepper it a little more, I didn't do that great of a
job this time around. First stew of the season's never up to par."
Erich ReinhardtNothing
seems to keep him from turning his back to her open up a cabinet.
Humans might consider it rude. Garou might consider it daring or
stupid. Erich doesn't really care. He doubts she'd try to stab him in
the back. He seriously doubts she'd get very far trying. He reaches
for one of the larger bowls. Inspects the bowl, then puts it back.
Gets an even bigger one down, clicking it to the counter.
"Don't
ever apologize for the quality of your charity," he advises over his
shoulder. The lid of the pot clanks down on the stove. "Anyway, can't
remember the last time I had homecooked stew. So don't remember what
good stew tastes like anyway."
That hoodie of his must be
dedicated; he wears it all the time. He's wearing it again, hanging
unzipped off his shoulders. It rode his t-shirt up in the back when he
reached for her soup bowls, and while he ladles stew out one-handed he
tugs it back into place, absently. It takes him a while to fill a bowl
that big. One scoop. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. He thinks a
minute. He adds a seventh.
"Spoon?" he prompts. She tells him.
He rattles her silverware drawer open. A male Garou invariably makes
more noise in a kitchen than a female kin. Drew can probably almost
imagine the hinges and rails on her cabinetry coming a little loose
under the assault. Erich plunks a spoon into his stew, ignores the
buns, grabs the salt and pepper shakers, carries his spoils over to the
little table. Hands full, he tugs a chair out with his foot, drops
down.
When he leans over his meal he seems to take up half the
space on the tabletop. Half the space in the kitchen, maybe the house.
Second time she's seen him eat, and he's just as carnivorous: skirting
the potatoes and the carrots, wolfing down the beef. It takes him
seconds to finish half the bowl, and then he sits up.
"Thirsty," he says. Maybe he'll be down to grunted syllables next. "Got a glass?"
Drew Roscoe"I
wasn't apologizing so much as warnin' you might wanna grab salt and
pepper off the stove on your way back to the table," Drew offered to
him. Her tone was low, her words a little slower now than they had been
earlier in the night. She's winding down-- young thing like her's
gotten herself into a schedule of having a pretty early bedtime. Yet,
despite the fact that she (probably) would be asleep by now, her eyes
aren't drooping and she doesn't seem to be anxious to get into her room.
Rather,
she's made herself comfortable. The one dangling leg came up into her
seat to join the other, crossing criss-cross-applesauce now. She was
turned at the waist so that one arm could sling over the back of her
chair, and the other hand reached for the half-empty mug that she'd been
drinking from to take a sip.
She watched Erich while he moved about in her kitchen and spooned himself up some (a whole lot of) stew.
Spoons?
"Drawer right below."
Cupboards
and drawers protest weakly against Erich's rough minstrations, but Drew
doesn't defend them. He's not going to break anything by slapping
doors and drawers closed, after all.
Once he's sat down at the
table he's wolfing down his food like someone might snatch it up from
him if he's not careful, or like the time of the day might slip away too
quickly and he'll have wasted precious time eating that should have
been spent elsewhere. Drew just observes, bemeaused, as he skirts
chunks of potato, carrot coins, onion and celery and tiny chopped bits
of garlic of he can help it. The statement of thirst and questioning
for a glass is met simply by a small (but curiously content) smile that
manifests in the corners of her mouth but doesn't spread across the
whole thing. Rather than explaining, Drew rose and went to fetch.
The
cupboard and fridge doors were handled less noisily than they would
have been had Erich been pulling them open and slapping them closed, and
Drew returned to set a tall glass of milk on the table beside the big
deep bowl of stew. "Whenever ya like I'll show you to the shower and
towels and all that." Because any good kin knows that a traveling
Garou's favorite getaway is a good warm shower.
Erich ReinhardtThere's
a quiet that settles in the small hours of the night. Stay up a few
more hours and Drew would feel it -- that stillness in the hours between
midnight and dawn, when the world sleeps, when instinct hushes the
voice and slows the body. She's not the type, though. She sleeps
early, rises early, hardly goes to the city except for business, keeps a
house too big for herself just in case she gets guests.
She rises
to get him water. Or milk, as it were. His eyes follow her, and
there's a moment where he almost gets up with her. Doesn't, though, and
it's not because he's decided it's his right to sit and get served.
When she gets back and sets a glass of milk beside him he's stirring
his stew, glancing up with a faint smile.
"Thanks," he says. He
picks it up, his hand dwarfing the glass that had appeared tall in hers.
"But now you're just suggesting I stink." He nods her toward the
chair she'd occupied a moment ago, starting in on the stew again.
"Besides, I never got done asking you. Who do you wanna get accepted
by so bad?"
Drew Roscoe"Ah damnit."
This is
Drew's answer to Erich's pressing the question he'd had hours ago back
in the garage that had been interrupted by a strange and suspicious
sound. She was honestly hoping he'd forgotten that thread of
conversation and was going to let it die. But no, as it were, the
Shadow Lord was curious and pressing the matter.
So Drew settled
herself into the same chair she'd been sitting in, folding her legs up
onto the seat with her once more and taking her coffee mug in both hands
to take a sip. Eyes would study Erich for a moment, half-sullen but
not all the way there, then they'd land on the sketch-painted designs of
flowers and a blue jay nested within them on the side of her pale-cream
colored mug.
"Mostly my own Tribe. I feel like I lost my place
with them when Joe passed. I miss what it was and what I used to have
so damn bad sometimes that the end goal kinda.... blurs a little and I
forget where I'm goin'. These days, though, I'd be happy if any pack
had a place for me to support them." She paused to sip at her coffee,
thought for a moment, then continued on after a deep breath.
"I
like the Cutlers. Josie and Sam and Eric, I like them all. The kids
are cute as hell too. But... well, I'm on the outside, nice as they
are. And frankly it just feels like a reminder of what I missed when I
see 'em whole and happy like they are. Kinda stings."
[[ Rest of Transcript Missing! ]]
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