Advice
Posted: 11 Apr 2016, 12:36
< Ric > I’m staring down at my phone at the same number I’ve pondered texting or calling for the last twenty-two minutes. Everyone has their problems and their own issues, I’m not special. I know she’s probably got a lot of things going on in her life, which would explain why Jules has been so quiet on all fronts. Nothing on the Hawthorne Crownet and as a plus, nothing in my brain lately either.
Truth was that if I knew what to do next, I wouldn’t even be bothering Jules. I like my space and I don’t mind the quiet, eve if that might mean something is going on somewhere. It’s not normal for chicks to not talk or make their presence known in some way for this long. She might think I’m mad at her for the River thing and that might explain it. That’s probably why she’s stayed quiet. I’m over it. River is alive and didn’t die. I wasn’t pleased with Jules or Doc, but River’s a tough cookie. She managed out just fine in the end and reminds me of, well...me. Only a chick me. As disturbing a thought as that is. I push Jules name and hit message and send her a message.
I have a situation and need a person’s advice. You free? I hit send without reviewing the message. I say what I say, because I mean it. There’s no reason to reread my words and second guess what I wrote. I do need advice and I do have a situation. Not a problem, but a situation. The problem part if behind me, I need to what to do now that the problem is done with.
<Jules> She had been dealing with customers and trying to finish the rest of her orders after closing Rayney Days and Fabrics. It hadn’t been something she’d wanted to do, but eventually, they had to close for her to reopen Blackadder. Her clinic had been something that she missed and although Cassadee hadn’t been capable of anything in the medical department, her business degree was good enough so that Juliet could do her own thing again.<p>
And because of it, after winning in the battle with Black Heart, she had grown quiet. Occasionally, she would look at Hawthorne but find herself with nothing more to say and her attention would go elsewhere. When she wasn’t working, she was training harder. After River nearly dying, and the fact she herself hadn’t been the best with fighting, it was something she wanted to change. Something she wanted to improve. She’d always been good with a rifle, but good wasn’t always great and there was nothing wrong with getting better. Shooting her brother in the groin hadn’t been her best shot, either.<p>
The click of her fingertips against the keyboard was interrupted as her phone began to play You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch signaling that she’d gotten a text from Ric and Juliet moved to collect the device. She tilted her head, reading it over before typing out a response. Yeah, where would you like to meet? Pressing send, she scooted back in her chair and scratched at her neck lightly as she heard one of her employees call out for Cassadee. “You’re the manager, you can do it without me!”
< Ric > I was still sitting on the couch in my hut when the text came through. I hadn’t really been doing anything tonight, or any night since my life transitioned into whatever it was now. Reading and killing things primarily, but even the latter was less likely than the former. I had no sense of direction on what to do or what I should be doing. I told Thing One, who claimed I appeared ‘down’ what was going on-well, the basic gist of it, but left out most details. It was simple and to the point, nothing else was needed. SIster B was dead and Skylar left. Or just stopped coming home. Or whatever this was.
I read the message and then shrugged. I don’t know where to meet for something like this. I don’t want everyone knowing because it’s not their business. We can’t meet here, even though It’s private enough and a place where I’m comfortable at. So I need some place private and low key. Abandoned school near Westwall. It’s all I say and the only place I can think of. No one really goes there but the occasional hobo, and I can chase them out before Jules gets there.
With the message sent, I stand, grab my leather cut from the chair to the right of the couch, slide into it and pocket the phone in my back, left pants pocket. I slide into my boots that are by the door and then head out of the hut. I take it down to a portal and then find myself outside at a train station. I don’t take the train, instead I start walking away from it to a small convenience store. I need cigarettes first, since I only have two left in the soft pack that’s in the inner pocket of my coat. I head in, ask for a pack, pay and that’s just how simple it is. I stuff it in with the other pack, head west until no one is around and then teleport outside the old school in Westwall. I look around, then go inside the parking lot meant for staff once upon a time and stand outside the building waiting for Jules.
<Jules> As it turned out, the staff member couldn’t deal with an unruly customer which simply ended up with security escorted them out before Juliet returned to her office to wait for an answer. The neat feel of her office hadn’t changed even after her death - everything had it’s place, there was a hammock still in the corner for the days she didn’t feel like trekking back to her boat and through a door, a shower could be accessed. Comfort had been what she wanted, but privacy had ended up being the best function.
It was a place to escape.
Or, at least it had been a place to escape. Now, it was just her workspace and occasional bedroom. When the song went off again, Juliet dug the device from her pocket once more and looked it over. Westwall wasn’t too far of a walk and she knew her brother would be punctual himself. “Heading out.” She called, picking up her jacket and removing the small pocket pistol from her desk before tucking it away. Juliet typed out a response, “Be there soon.” pressing send shortly after as she waved to the cashier - new, her name still tended to escape the brunette’s mind.
It didn’t take long for Juliet to reach the transit that would take her to Westwall, and then from there, the woman hurried in the direction of the school. She didn’t often come to that side of town, lately it had been from River Rock to Redwood, to Bullwood and over to the Caverns and back, and because of such, it took her a few minutes longer than she would have liked - but when she stepped inside, Juliet called out, “Ric!”
< Ric > Jules is inside, I hear her voice echoing off the walls inside of the building. She must have went in a side door, or been ballsy and went in the front one. Good for her, whichever the case may be. She snuck in past me. The thought made my lips curl up just a little bit.
“Here.” I say as I crawl through a window that had been damaged, boarded up, pulled down, boarded up, and pulled down again. It seemed people got tired of boarding these windows up-not that I blame them. Why continually spend money and resources on something that’s never going to be operational? My crawling wasn’t as I imagined it to be, I didn’t calculate for someone’s crap to be near the window, so my arm slipped out from under me due to the torn and tattered blanket that was under it, along with a couple of pop and beer cans. “Living the dream.” I mutter to myself as I slide, then rolled away from someone’s crap. “I’ll come to you.” I don’t actually know where she is yet, but I’ll hit a hallway soon enough and go from there.
Truth was that if I knew what to do next, I wouldn’t even be bothering Jules. I like my space and I don’t mind the quiet, eve if that might mean something is going on somewhere. It’s not normal for chicks to not talk or make their presence known in some way for this long. She might think I’m mad at her for the River thing and that might explain it. That’s probably why she’s stayed quiet. I’m over it. River is alive and didn’t die. I wasn’t pleased with Jules or Doc, but River’s a tough cookie. She managed out just fine in the end and reminds me of, well...me. Only a chick me. As disturbing a thought as that is. I push Jules name and hit message and send her a message.
I have a situation and need a person’s advice. You free? I hit send without reviewing the message. I say what I say, because I mean it. There’s no reason to reread my words and second guess what I wrote. I do need advice and I do have a situation. Not a problem, but a situation. The problem part if behind me, I need to what to do now that the problem is done with.
<Jules> She had been dealing with customers and trying to finish the rest of her orders after closing Rayney Days and Fabrics. It hadn’t been something she’d wanted to do, but eventually, they had to close for her to reopen Blackadder. Her clinic had been something that she missed and although Cassadee hadn’t been capable of anything in the medical department, her business degree was good enough so that Juliet could do her own thing again.<p>
And because of it, after winning in the battle with Black Heart, she had grown quiet. Occasionally, she would look at Hawthorne but find herself with nothing more to say and her attention would go elsewhere. When she wasn’t working, she was training harder. After River nearly dying, and the fact she herself hadn’t been the best with fighting, it was something she wanted to change. Something she wanted to improve. She’d always been good with a rifle, but good wasn’t always great and there was nothing wrong with getting better. Shooting her brother in the groin hadn’t been her best shot, either.<p>
The click of her fingertips against the keyboard was interrupted as her phone began to play You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch signaling that she’d gotten a text from Ric and Juliet moved to collect the device. She tilted her head, reading it over before typing out a response. Yeah, where would you like to meet? Pressing send, she scooted back in her chair and scratched at her neck lightly as she heard one of her employees call out for Cassadee. “You’re the manager, you can do it without me!”
< Ric > I was still sitting on the couch in my hut when the text came through. I hadn’t really been doing anything tonight, or any night since my life transitioned into whatever it was now. Reading and killing things primarily, but even the latter was less likely than the former. I had no sense of direction on what to do or what I should be doing. I told Thing One, who claimed I appeared ‘down’ what was going on-well, the basic gist of it, but left out most details. It was simple and to the point, nothing else was needed. SIster B was dead and Skylar left. Or just stopped coming home. Or whatever this was.
I read the message and then shrugged. I don’t know where to meet for something like this. I don’t want everyone knowing because it’s not their business. We can’t meet here, even though It’s private enough and a place where I’m comfortable at. So I need some place private and low key. Abandoned school near Westwall. It’s all I say and the only place I can think of. No one really goes there but the occasional hobo, and I can chase them out before Jules gets there.
With the message sent, I stand, grab my leather cut from the chair to the right of the couch, slide into it and pocket the phone in my back, left pants pocket. I slide into my boots that are by the door and then head out of the hut. I take it down to a portal and then find myself outside at a train station. I don’t take the train, instead I start walking away from it to a small convenience store. I need cigarettes first, since I only have two left in the soft pack that’s in the inner pocket of my coat. I head in, ask for a pack, pay and that’s just how simple it is. I stuff it in with the other pack, head west until no one is around and then teleport outside the old school in Westwall. I look around, then go inside the parking lot meant for staff once upon a time and stand outside the building waiting for Jules.
<Jules> As it turned out, the staff member couldn’t deal with an unruly customer which simply ended up with security escorted them out before Juliet returned to her office to wait for an answer. The neat feel of her office hadn’t changed even after her death - everything had it’s place, there was a hammock still in the corner for the days she didn’t feel like trekking back to her boat and through a door, a shower could be accessed. Comfort had been what she wanted, but privacy had ended up being the best function.
It was a place to escape.
Or, at least it had been a place to escape. Now, it was just her workspace and occasional bedroom. When the song went off again, Juliet dug the device from her pocket once more and looked it over. Westwall wasn’t too far of a walk and she knew her brother would be punctual himself. “Heading out.” She called, picking up her jacket and removing the small pocket pistol from her desk before tucking it away. Juliet typed out a response, “Be there soon.” pressing send shortly after as she waved to the cashier - new, her name still tended to escape the brunette’s mind.
It didn’t take long for Juliet to reach the transit that would take her to Westwall, and then from there, the woman hurried in the direction of the school. She didn’t often come to that side of town, lately it had been from River Rock to Redwood, to Bullwood and over to the Caverns and back, and because of such, it took her a few minutes longer than she would have liked - but when she stepped inside, Juliet called out, “Ric!”
< Ric > Jules is inside, I hear her voice echoing off the walls inside of the building. She must have went in a side door, or been ballsy and went in the front one. Good for her, whichever the case may be. She snuck in past me. The thought made my lips curl up just a little bit.
“Here.” I say as I crawl through a window that had been damaged, boarded up, pulled down, boarded up, and pulled down again. It seemed people got tired of boarding these windows up-not that I blame them. Why continually spend money and resources on something that’s never going to be operational? My crawling wasn’t as I imagined it to be, I didn’t calculate for someone’s crap to be near the window, so my arm slipped out from under me due to the torn and tattered blanket that was under it, along with a couple of pop and beer cans. “Living the dream.” I mutter to myself as I slide, then rolled away from someone’s crap. “I’ll come to you.” I don’t actually know where she is yet, but I’ll hit a hallway soon enough and go from there.