TarantulaHawk
💞 libra — istp 💞
"Ooh, I need your love babe, guess you know it's true."
There she sat, resting on a small wooden bench. Her ankles were crossed, feet donning a pair of red and white sneakers. Because of her height, they swung aimlessly while crossed. Her feet couldn't exactly touch the ground. She wasn't even a child. She was a full-grown adult and she couldn't even touch the ground when she sat down. How embarrassing for her. All the same, her fingertips carefully slid across the chords to her ukulele, her pale blue nails gleaming against white strings and an even whiter wood.
"Hope you need my love, babe, just like I need you."
She was going through a rough patch, of course, hence the reason she had a little bowler hat next to her, flipped upside down with a little sticky note attached to the brim that said 'tips are welcome' on it. She had come to Sleepy Peak with a one-way bus ticket from Seattle, her hometown. She wanted nothing more than to be back in the city where she could walk along the pier and explore the underground, talking with people from all over the world. She had been a tour guide for a while, but was a jack of all trades kind of girl, really. She had been all sorts of things once she finally got her life together; a cook, a waitress, a librarian, a taxi driver, an accountant and a few other things she tried to forget about.
"Hold me, love me, hold me, love me."
She giggled mid-lyric, a little breeze ruffling her white skater skirt - the folds danced playfully across her thighs, revealing a little bit of pale skin before the skirt settled once more. Even though she wished to be back in the city, she had to admit that Sleepy Peak was kind of... Unique. She hadn't been out of the big city in many years and she liked nature. She liked how slow and quiet the town was. Sort of. She was still pretty much broke because not many people walked by her. In fact, it had been a solid fifteen minutes since she saw a car drive through the town. As she continued to strum, she looked at the bowler hat with a little frown. A nickel, three pennies, and a paper clip. Maybe it wasn't the fact that she was in the middle of nowhere. Her frown got a little deeper. Was she really that bad?
"I ain't got nothin' but love, babe, eight days a week~!"
There she sat, resting on a small wooden bench. Her ankles were crossed, feet donning a pair of red and white sneakers. Because of her height, they swung aimlessly while crossed. Her feet couldn't exactly touch the ground. She wasn't even a child. She was a full-grown adult and she couldn't even touch the ground when she sat down. How embarrassing for her. All the same, her fingertips carefully slid across the chords to her ukulele, her pale blue nails gleaming against white strings and an even whiter wood.
"Hope you need my love, babe, just like I need you."
She was going through a rough patch, of course, hence the reason she had a little bowler hat next to her, flipped upside down with a little sticky note attached to the brim that said 'tips are welcome' on it. She had come to Sleepy Peak with a one-way bus ticket from Seattle, her hometown. She wanted nothing more than to be back in the city where she could walk along the pier and explore the underground, talking with people from all over the world. She had been a tour guide for a while, but was a jack of all trades kind of girl, really. She had been all sorts of things once she finally got her life together; a cook, a waitress, a librarian, a taxi driver, an accountant and a few other things she tried to forget about.
"Hold me, love me, hold me, love me."
She giggled mid-lyric, a little breeze ruffling her white skater skirt - the folds danced playfully across her thighs, revealing a little bit of pale skin before the skirt settled once more. Even though she wished to be back in the city, she had to admit that Sleepy Peak was kind of... Unique. She hadn't been out of the big city in many years and she liked nature. She liked how slow and quiet the town was. Sort of. She was still pretty much broke because not many people walked by her. In fact, it had been a solid fifteen minutes since she saw a car drive through the town. As she continued to strum, she looked at the bowler hat with a little frown. A nickel, three pennies, and a paper clip. Maybe it wasn't the fact that she was in the middle of nowhere. Her frown got a little deeper. Was she really that bad?
"I ain't got nothin' but love, babe, eight days a week~!"
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