Howdyparker
New Member
I'd say call Uncle Greg. I know you're a runner, but it seems like your want a fight more right now. And it might piss your mom off, a bus since you're angry with her.
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You rip off your seatbelt. The metal clip clatters against the window. You fumble for the door handle and kick the door open. You stagger out of the van and kneel in the grass on the side of the highway.
“Sigrid!” Your mother calls from inside the van.
The sun beats down on your neck. You dig into the grass and dirt. The roots between your fingers ground you. Air fresher than any you breathed in Austin fill your lungs. You sit, eyes closed, and just breathe.
A car swooshes by. “Sigrid,” Your mother’s voice brings you back to reality. She sits besides you in the grass. How long have you been sitting here? Your mother shines with a thin sheen of sweat, her eyes heavy with worry.
“I’m going to go get help.” You take off at a sprint. You kick off your shoes, leaving them behind for your mother to pick up.
“Sigrid! It’s too hot!” The wind eats your mother’s words. Your toes dig into the grass. It’s good to move under your own power. To escape the metal cage your mom calls a van.
After a few miles, your head clears. Sweat drips down your face and the humid summer wind does little to cool you. The heat drains your rage and you realize your error. You have no clue where the nearest gas station is. Your mother said Kirksville was thirty minutes away, but that was by car. There had to be a gas station closer than that, right?
Cars drive by on the highway and you decide to tough it out. This is not your first time your mother’s van died and you had to run to the nearest gas station. You ran in worse heat before at track meets. You were thirsty but you’ll survive. You settle down into a sustainable ground eating lope.
You pass a sign warning of the 965 Junction. You stop in the scant shade of the sign and wipe sweat off of your brow. You look around and see nothing but boulders, dried grass, and scrub. You thought you’d find a gas station by now. This is stupid. You were in the middle of nowhere Texas. Kirksville could where the nearest gas station is. You pat your pocket and realize you left your shattered phone in your mother’s van. “Shit.” You are commit to your choice now.
Movement in the bushes attracts your attention. A dark furred animal retreats from the highway. A dog? A break in the cover reveals this canine is no dog. A wolf! A black wolf, his ratty summer coat bespeckled with brown. He disappears out of sight. You search the bushes and see no sign of the wolf. You squeeze sweat out of your braid and take off again. You’ll have to find a gas station soon.
The shy wolf shadows you as you run. You stare straight ahead, you see him out of the corner of your eye. You turn to look at him, he flees deeper into the scrub. Finally, you reach a truck stop at the highway turn off. It is a small truck stop. It has only one fuel pump with two handles- one for unleaded, one for diesel. The parking lot is empty, save a single red pickup truck. A large wooden porch wraps around the building. Wooden picnic tables and an ice machine sit out front. A peaked roof reaches for the blazing blue sky. The truck stop reminds you of a converted farm house rather than a commercial building.
The pavement burns your feet as you jog to the water fountain on the side of the building. You plunge your over heated face into the fountain stream. After you cool off, you swish water around your mouth and sip it out on the pavement.
As you drink your fill, you glance up to find the shy wolf watching you. You were surprised he followed you this close to civilization. His golden eyes shine with intelligence rather than animal cunning. When you met the shy wolf’s eyes, he darts off into bushes again.
You rub water over your face and comb wet fingers through your hair. You are barefoot and wearing sweat soaked clothes, but you better be presentable enough for the truck stop.
The door chimes when you enter the store. A blast of cold air welcomes you. The tile floor is cool on your bare feet. Despite its small size, the store is well stocked. Though you don’t see any recognizable brands of brightly colored junk food, you find a fair selection of foods. You pass a basket of fresh made bread. One aisle contains jars of jams and salsa. Another bags of candy and trail mix. Your eyes are drawn to a line of refrigerated coolers with chilled drinks. You didn’t have any money, but maybe the clerk will take pity on the poor girl with car trouble.
The clerk in his early twenties sits behind a counter protected by a barred metal cage. At first glance, you think him fat. Then you see the well defined muscles under his uniform polo shirt. Black ink tattoos peek out from under his collar. With his shaved head, he looks more like a bouncer for a skinhead club rather than truck stop clerk. A handwritten sign above him declares “Still sold out of Ice Cream. Stop asking.”
“Hey!” You walk up to the counter. “My mother and I are having car problems. I think the battery is dead. Do you know someone who can give us a jump? Or a tow?”
The clerk looks you up and down with pale blue eyes. “You Sigrid Kirk?” He asks, ignoring everything you said.
“Yes... How do you know my name? Are you related to me?” The truck stop was close enough for this clerk to live in Kirksville.
“Gaia, I wish.” The clerk replies. “No, your Aunt Anne called. Said for you to wait here for Alex.”
“Who the fuck is Alex?” That wasn’t the name of any cousin you know.
The door chimes. “That’s Alex.” A tall, gawky teenage boy, dressed in blue jeans and a striped blue shirt, enters. Alex walks with a slouch, attempting to conceal his height. His dark hair is neatly trimmed and an oversized smart watch sits on his slender wrist. Alex is the sort of cute geeky guy who usually flees in the other direction when you approach them. His dark brown eyes dart around the store. When he spots you, Alex gives you a shy wave and walks over. He removes a small black leather notebook from his pocket. “Hi, I’m Alex. I’m Deaf.” He writes, “What is your name?”
“My name is Sigrid Kirk, but you already knew that.” You write back. “How do you know my Aunt Anne?”
“Miss Anne is my step mother.” With a few extra pounds and a large dose of confidence, Alex could be an younger version of your Uncle Greg.
The clerk waves his arms to attract Alex’s attention. “Alex, look at me.” He points at his mouth. “Tell your father the camera is broken again.” The clerk overenunciates each words.
Alex frowns. He flips a few pages forward in his notebook. “Speak Normally.” It reads in black marker. Apparently, Alex has this problem often.
“I am speaking normally,” the clerk huffs. “Tell. your. dad. the. camera. is. Broken.”
“He means he can read your lips easier if you don’t talk like an idiot.” You explain.
“If you are so fucking smart, why don’t you explain it to him.” The clerk points at the camera above the cage. “That camera is broken. I need his Glasswalker daddy to fix it.”
Alex watches the clerk speak and then stares at the camera with an inquisitive expression.
You smirk. “I think you just told him yourself, since you talked like a normal person that time.”
“Just as long as the camera is fucking fixed.” The asshole clerk sneers. He returns to reading his magazine.
Alex, unaware of your exchange with the clerk, writes, “You don’t need to wait for my dad. I can fix the camera.”
You close Alex’s notebook. “Don’t fix this asshole’s camera.” You order Alex. “Greg Wright is coming back tomorrow.” You tell the clerk. “Your fucking camera can wait until then.”
“Fucking bitch,” the clerk slaps his magazine down. “I don’t care if your daddy is Franklin Kirk. You ain’t Garou yet and you got no right to be giving orders.”
You reach through the bars of the clerk’s cage and slam his face into them. “I don’t care what you think. You treat that deaf boy poorly again, I’ll rip your ears off. Got it?”
The clerk, cheek smushed into the bars, nods. You let him go with a shove. Shit, you curse at yourself. You should have watched your temper. First cute boy you meet in town and you have to go browbeating the clerk in front of him. Now Alex will think you are a psycho. And he will tell all the kids at your new school you are a psycho, too.
Despite observing your display of violence, no expression of fear mars Alex’s face. He gives you a small smile and touches his hand to his chin and drops it forward. “Thank you,” he signs.
You return the smile and suddenly are aware of your sweaty hair, clothes, and barefeet. Of course you meet a fearless boy in this disheveled state. It’s probably for the best. You’d crack this nerdy boy in half without a thought. Anyways, you swore off guys after Scott.
Alex holds up his notebook. “Did I do something wrong?”
“What?” You realize you were staring. “No, you are fine. I don’t remember the sign for ‘You’re welcome.’ I learned some ASL in fifth grade. Well, only finger spelling to be honest, but I came in fifth place in the spelling bee.” You stop. You are rambling. You doubt Alex caught half of what you said.
Alex scratches the back of his head and then writes, “I have a book on ASL you can borrow.”
“I’d like that.” You nod.
Alex relaxes. He turns a new page in his notebook. “Miss Anne told me to come get you. She is helping your mom with the van. They are packing your stuff in Miss Anne’s SUV. The alternator died, so it couldn’t charge the battery. We can tow it back to town tomorrow and I can replace it later.”
“You fix cars?” With his pallid skin, you figured Alex was a computer geek.
“Yes, they are more forgiving than computers.”
You sign thank you. You take the notebook from his hand and write. “Let’s go outside. This clerk is an asshole. Does he treat you like that because you are deaf?”
“Among other reasons. Half the kinfolk are scared of me and the other half think I’m an idiot.”
Scared of a deaf kid? Whoever these kinfolk are, they sound like losers. “You don’t seem scary nor an idiot to me.”
Alex blushes and reaches for the side of his head. A strange and awkward gesture. He pauses, not finding what he is reaching for, and rubs the side of his face instead. Alex stares down at the floor, embarrassed. He hurries to a cooler and takes out an apple juice. He shakes a second one at you. You nod and he hands it to you. Alex drops a five on the counter. The clerk doesn’t even look up when you leave.
Alex sits on one of the wooden benches and pulls out his phone. He types on the screen with his thumb and sips his apple juice. You chug your juice and toss the empty bottle in the recycle bin. You still have Alex’s notebook. You tap the pen against your lips and watch Alex fiddle with his phone. Maybe Alex can tell you what is going on. “What is a Garoo?” You didn’t miss the clerk’s statement and you hope you spelt the strange word right.
Your heart pounds as you pass the notebook over. When he starts writing you look over his shoulder. “You wouldn’t believe me if I told you. I could show you, but it’s not myaus,” Alex scratches out the word half finished. “place to question your father’s decisions.”
Does anyone stand up to your father in this town? You rip the notebook out of Alex’s hand. “If you were in my place, wouldn’t you want someone to tell you what is going on?”
Alex reads the note with a guilty expression. He sighs and writes, “I want to tell you, but I cannot pierce the veil. I’ll get in trouble.”
“Well, thanks for the apple juice.” You write back, disappointed. Belatenly, you think of another question. “What is the veil?” Maybe there was a reason beyond your father’s whims for this run around.
Before you can hand back the notebook, the phone glows in Alex’s hand. You read the texts, hoping to gain more clues to what is going on. Alex is texting his dad:
Greg WrightmeThe camera broke at the truck shop againthemI won’t be back until tomorrow. Can you fix it?meSigrid is with me.themHow does this stop you from fixing the camera?meThe clerk is an asshole. He thinks I’m an idiot. He wants you to fix it.themGo fix the camera.themYou’ll feel bad if something happens to the clerk because the camera is broken.
Alex kicks the ice machine with a growl and he storms back into the store. Does everyone have a temper in this town? You hurry after Alex. The clerk does not look up from his magazine. Alex raps his knuckles on the counter and holds up his notebook. “My dad wants me to fix the camera. I need a ladder.”
The clerk sets down his magazine with a sigh. He retrieves a short steel ladder from the storage closet and sets it up under the camera. Then he returns to his cage.
Alex climbs the ladder. All elbows and knees, he tips it off balance. You right the ladder before it falls. Alex thanks you again and stands on the top step of the ladder. Precariously balanced, he fiddles with the camera cables. You stand there bored, holding the ladder steady. How long will this take? You are in need of a shower and some answers. It’s become a matter of pride to figure out what the fuck is going on before you meet your father tomorrow. Alex already said he wanted to tell you. You plan on hounding him until he spills the beans about what’s going on at the Wilderness Preserve.
The door chimes and two men dressed in grimy clothes enter the store. Both men have the emaciated wide eye look of drug addicts. They stalk the aisles, whispering and observing the clerk. One nods at the broken camera.
The clerk pretends to read his magazine and watches the two men out of the corner of his eye. Alex sniffs at the shorter of the two men as they pass you. You gag at their unwashed odor. Alex and the clerk meet eyes. The clerk nods and sets his magazine aside. Alex leaves the camera hanging by its cables. Tension fills the air. You take a step closer to Alex, prepared to protect the gawky boy from the idiot crack heads.
“Can I help you boys with something?” The clerk asks, hands out of sight.
“Yeah,” the short man reveals a small chipped chrome pistol from the pocket of his jean jacket. “You can clean out that cash…” To your utter shock, Alex leaps from the top of the ladder and tackles the armed man to the ground. The man’s pistol skids across the floor. The short man punches Alex across the face. Alex throws his arm around the short man’s neck.
The clerk reveals a short black shotgun. Instead of intimidating the robbers and defusing the situation, the clerk pumps his shotgun. Shotgun shells fly as the clerk fires into the taller man’s gut. BAM! The tall man staggers back into a shelf of canned goods. BAM! The shelf knocks over. The cans scatters and roll over the floor.
“Fucking hell!” You cover your ears from the gunshots. “Haven’t you people heard of calling the police when you get robbed?!” You scream. You’ve fought in schoolyard brawls. You’ve lived in rough neighborhoods. Yet you never had a fucking gun fight break out in front of you before.
The tall emaciated man groans. He spits blood on the floor. He stands. His guts pour out in a mess of swinging entrails. If possible he smells worse than before. He takes a staggering step forward, dripping blood and liquid shit in his wake.
“Alex!” The clerk’s voice is shrill with fear. “This guy is still moving!” Entrails man draws his own gun, a greasy black pistol. The clerk ducks behind the counter as a bullet flies above his head.
The clerk out of sight, entrails man turns towards Alex. He points his gun at the boy. “Watch out!” you scream.
Alex, intent on putting the short man into a headlock, doesn’t respond to your warning. Alex is deaf, you remember. He can’t hear you nor the clerk. He doesn’t perceive the danger. Entrails man pulls the trigger.
BAM!
What do you do?
- Call upon your rage and… the time has not come yet. (Nope!)
- Pick up the ladder (or other object) and beat entrails man. (Melee)
- Pick up the discarded pistol and shoot entrails man (Firearms)
- Jump entrails man and beat him with your bare hands (Brawl)
- Pitch canned goods at entrails man’s head (Athletics)
- Other (ST’s choice of ability)
Can we do a combo of brawl and melee? To me they seem similar-ish. If not, go with melee. I like pointy wooden stakes.