Chapter One: The Gears of Fate
Turn 2: Autumn
Jacqueline 'Jack' Coupe
There was a lot of bodies in the amusement park that day. Johnny didn't really care about the bodies. Johnny parked his Dodge near the gate, then lit another cigarette for himself. He was the cleanup crew: see a problem, get there before the cops do, find out what happened and who's responsible, then wipe clean the evidence. There was an added objective: make sure Duffey was alive.
Johnny walked over the bodies of the Irish Mobsters and over the spent AK mags and... drum mags? Who was using a Tommy Gun? He shook his head and looked around. He saw Duffey cowering in an abandoned candy floss trailer, and walked over.
"Johnny, oh Christ, Johnny, the fuck just happened--" said Duffey in his whiny D4 voice.
"Sir, get in my car, everything is safe." said Johnny. Duffey merely stayed still, but when Johnny grabbed him and practically threw him out of the trailer he ran off to the Dodge. Johnny saw a white suited "bro" lying on the ground some ways off to the distance. He walked over at a lesuirely pace and kneeled down to look at the poor fucker. The mafiya kid was scrawny and pale, looking like he was running out of blood.
"Howya?" said Johnny, smiling. "Everything's going to be alright."
"Who... who are you?" asked the kid.
"A friend. Now, tell me..." Johnny flicked his cigarette stub away and lit another, taking a long drag. "What's your name?"
"Sergei..."
"I see." Typical Ruskie name. "Mind telling me what happened here?"
*
They were waiting on Duffey and the rest of the Irish Mob. They were like the Irish gangbangers of the 30s and 40s, except in this city they never really left. They found a niche with connections to the many, many versions of the IRA, earning them weapons. They also ran a high quality import-export business at the dock. Sergei didn't like them.
Sergei was in the Mafiya. Just a lowly bratok, nothing to write home about, but he served under Dmitri. Dmitri was a good avtoriet, a big son of a bitch who was muscular and a head above most men. Sergei, Dmitri and a few of the boys were waiting around in the courtyard of the Green Eyed Amusement Park, an old Victorian amusement park that got shut down in the 1920s when kids started dying there. It gave Sergei the creeps but they had a few plants there making cocaine, so it was customary to have deals there back when this was all the Mafiya had.
Sergei flicked a mite of dust off his cheap white suit. You could say a lot about the organization's uniform. It was very easy to tell when it was dirty or not.
Six boys in black trenchcoats holding AK47s, rifles, and revolvers walked through the gate of the park, headed up by the man himself. Duffey was just a kid, holding up the organization's other parts while his dad dealt with the gang war. He wore colorful clothes and had green and blue streaked hair. Sergei felt subconsciously annoyed.
"Stop." Dmitri said. The mobsters obliged. Duffey smiled at Dmitri.
"Hiya!" said Duffey. Sergei only knew one person with that accent from watching British TV. Someone named Something Norton. His initials were G.N, he just couldn't remember the first name. "So, shall we get this on the road or what?"
"You speak when spoken to!" Sergei yelled out. "We ask the questions, not you!"
"Oooh, this one's a bit on edge!" said Duffey. He laughed. "Maybe you should stop sampling your own wares."
"How much guns you giving us?" asked Dmitri. Duffey motioned to a henchman, and the henchman tossed a briefcase on the ground, sliding towards Dmitri. Dmitri stopped it with a boot, then kneeled down and opened it. He thought, then nodded with the air of an expert. "Is good. Military, very nice. What you want?"
"500 kilos of coke, 200 of those lovely girls you have."
"Is impossible." said Dmitri, with a snap of the briefcase. "150 kilos. No girls."
"Uh, no?" said Duffey. "Listen, that's the final offer, there's no other option."
"If you were getting me enough weapons to supply army, this I could accept. 500 kilos of coke would get me enough weapons to take over this city. This is just briefcase. No go." said Dmitri, then standing up. "We rework deal or leave."
"This is ridiculous, those are top quality weapons!" said Duffey, huffing. "M16s, SPAS-12s, M60s... Do you realize how much shit we had to go through to even get the option to buy those?!"
"Yes. Don't care. 100 kilos of cocaine."
"250 would make me consider your offer."
"100."
"I wouldn't sell a pipe bomb for that much!"
"Isn't that funny? 100."
Duffey huffed and said "Alright, 100."
Sergei tried not to smile. He did not like Duffey in the slightest and he only knew him for five minutes tops. Dmitri motioned to Yuri, who grabbed two bales of cocaine and kicked it over to the Irish. Duffey began to motion towards the gate, then proceeded with his group toward the exit.
A man in a black trenchcoat and fedora holding a machine gun with a drum mag stepped out of the darkness. With a click of the trigger, he began to fire.
The Irish were the first to go, standing directly in the line of fire. Sergei screamed and jumped behind a bench, taking out his 44. Magnum and firing off a few rounds at the crazy guy in the trenchcoat in a blind panic, sticking behind cover as much as possible, sacrificing his aim. The ratatatatatatatatatatat of the machine gun firing and the screaming of his fellow men was not a good combination. Sergei peeked out of cover and saw Dmitri dragging himself along the ground.
Sergei looked over his shoulder. If he ran he could make it out of here. If he kept running to the docks, he could find a boat willing to take him up to New York or perhaps out of the country entirely. If you ran from your bros, especially an avtoriet like Dmitri, the Mafiya would pay in return. Possibly by melting your skin with acid like Vaka or chopping your legs off like Rooster.
Sergei shook his head. He wasn't a coward. He grabbed Dmitri by the shoulder and dragged him into cover. Dmitri coughed and got himself into a crouched position.
"Got a gun?" asked Dmitri. Sergei showed his revolver.
"Yeah, but I think--" ratatatatatatBLAMBLAMBLAMratatatatat "--the boys can handle it, just sit tight!" yelled Sergei over the gunfire.
There was a CHUGGACHUGGACHUGGA, and after a few long seconds Sergei poked a head over the bench. The crazy guy was standing, arms spread, above a puddle of his own blood. Yuri was standing behind a rubbish bin and, smart guy, had a smoking M60 in his hands. The recoil must have knocked him down as he was on his ass looking like a dumbass.
"Hey bros, I think I got him!" Yuri yelled, loud as a deaf kitten, and stood up grinning. He began to laugh. "Fuck yeah, I got him!"
The crazy guy looked up, then aimed his gun squarely at Yuri. With another blast of gunfire, Yuri was nothing but a stain.
Sergei ducked down again. That could have gone much better. Dmitri looked at him and Sergei looked back. Dmitri grabbed Sergei's hand, ripping the magnum out of his hands, then looked at the guy.
"Give me five minutes, Sergei." said Dmitri. "I'll sort this shit out."
And with that Dmitri was off.
Sergei took his chance and ran like hell away from the fight. There was three entrances. One was the main gate, and there was two side entrances. Sergei just had to keep running and he'd reach it. Then he'd escape. Then he'd survive. He caught a bullet to the back of his kneecap, and slivers of white hot pain ripped through his body. His legs couldn't move anymore, and the unwelcoming concrete ground greeted him like a fist.
He coughed, then all was silent.
*
"Who's the Humphrey Bogart lookalike, then?" asked Johnny.
"Who?" asked Sergei.
"Trenchcoat guy. Fedora. The one who shot everyone."
"Don't know."
"What happened to yer man, Dmitri?"
"Don't know."
"What's two plus two?"
"Huh?"
"Just messing with ya, don't mind it." Johnny flicked yet another cigarette away and lit one more. "So, your leg there... That's not looking good from here mate."
"Can you get me to a hospital?" said Sergei hopefully. Johnny thought.
"Well, there's no friendly hospitals in the vicinity, the cops are on the way, no-one would mind seeing yet another dead Mafiya on the streets, you'd die on the way there from the shock, you've told me all you know, and really you're just not worth the trouble." Johnny took out his pistol. "Sorry, but I'm going to need to pull an old Yeller on you. No hard feelings."
"No, NO!" Sergei screamed. Johnny shoved the gun in Sergei's open mouth, then pulled the trigger.
Johnny would have liked to advertise himself as a professional, but really he liked the work. Hey, they were just mafiya, right?
*
Magnus had taken a few jobs after the girl had done... whatever exactly she did to him. He didn't want to go all out and start charging the police like he thought he was Superman. He felt great and the girl told him he was ready to fight, but risks were always there. However, he found that he was really difficult to kill, if not outright impossible. It was like bullets just bounced off him like plastic knives to a steel door.
Now he was taking down a drug deal between the Irish and the Mafiya. These guys were heavy hitters, make no mistake, and he wouldn't even think about doing it for all the cash in the world. Now was different.
The mobsters looked at him confusedly. Their thug minds couldn't come up with a gang for him, most likely, and had either defaulted to "crazy idiot" or "cop". Problem is, cops haven't dressed like this since the 30s. This job was ordered by the Cartel. The Cartel weren't about teaching lessons, so Magnus felt he was safe when he started firing.
As he walked away from the amusement park, he had to admit... the girl was handy. [19] Hell, she deserved a bit... 40,000 dollars out of 80,000. They were pretty much partners anyway.
*
Liberal Guardian on Mafiya-Irish Mob Incident, February 2012
GANG WAR! Firey shootout between Mafiya and Irish Mobsters in Amusement Park leaves 14 dead!
Police state no living witnesses! Is this the beginning of yet another turf war? Conservatives have refused to comment.
Note found inside briefcase containing 40,000 dollars, sent to Coupe Residence.
"Thanks - M"
Nate Richards
For a second, it was not, then it was.
Spirits in this world were few and far between. The Inquisitors were basically to magic as the KT extinction event was to dinosaurs: any survivors were desperately rare. The world was now empty of magic. Spirits are creatures who live off magic. You do the math.
It survived, though. It was a spirit of fire. Spirits embodying elements tended to survive, being more there then any of the others. It lived off the warmth and the comfort made by the flames. It lived on through the ages. Fire went, though, and became replaced with gaslamps, which were then replaced with electronic torches. Now it had a problem.
Spirits do not think as such. They are cunning, they plan, and they can seem very smart. They just don't really think like humans do. They have a purpose, and that purpose must be done. They're animals.
However, mages of old found a use for them. Spirits are invisible and unable to be sensed with conventional tools. They are also formless. They're more like sentient moods then actual living beings. However, if you're good with magic, you can bind them into a willing form. This is typically referred to in magical circles (or was) as a familiar.
Familiars were good for instant labor, of course, and other tasks if smart enough, but they truly shined through for alchemists as they could replicate the biology of extinct creatures. This included Salamanders, otherwise known as the Dragon Inferior or Vegrandis Draco.
Any good mage who wanted to earn a good pay knew how to make a Salamander familiar. Nab a spirit of fire, bind it into the form, then you have a beast whose tail, eyes, tongue, and feet are worth a lot to alchemists, along with the internal organs. There's no real harm to the spirit, either. Apart from the emotional scarring, but hey!
The spirit was not there one minute, then there the next. It's a disorientating to be made real. You feel like you're made out of lead despite usually being made out of flesh. It was also very small and very fragile. The student acted very surprised at it's arrival, gasping and displaying the usual organic reactions to the bizarre. The spirit... Wasn't really a spirit now, was it? It was a Salamander.
The student continued to stare, occasionally petting and poking at it. The Salamander kept up it's solder-like pose. Eventually the student shook it's head and walked over to a desk, sitting at it and trying to avoid looking at the Salamander.
And so it went for a fortnight. The Salamander eventually made it's home in the warrens made by mice and rats, which were chased off by hissing and sharp teeth. Sometimes it came out to eat food from the fridge which it opened using a pencil, liberal application of parkour, and patience. Hunger. That was new for the Salamander. Very new. Also tasty. Tastier then fire, if that was possible. It's existence thus far was confused but pleasant.
Day seven, Monday. The Salamander was sunning itself on the expanse of the desk, on top of some papers that were in the direct sunlight. The student walked in, threw it's coat on the gathering continent of thrown clothes, and sat down on the chair. It looked at the Salamander and the Salamander looked back.
"Off." said the student. Like a watch, the Salamander's legs moved in clockwork fashion without their say-so. The Salamander fell off the desk and hissed in pain. It stood up and looked irately at the student. What wizardry did that mortal just do to it!?
"What?" said the student. "You're the one who walked off the desk! I just needed you to get off the desk!"
That may be so, mortal student, but you should specify!
"You go specify yourself... Wait. Oh, Nate, you're having an imaginary conversation with a lizard..." the student gripped the bridge of it's nose and turned away from the Salamander.
The salamander tried to sigh but it came out as an irritated hiss. It skulked off to a hole in which it entered it's warrens once again.
Red Kirmiz
Thomas Azur was the mayor. He was respected by the press, the police, the people, and the criminal element. Sure, crime went up a lot on his term but he gave funding out like candy. Even the Art Council was getting some. He was well liked by everyone, and that gave him a lot of leeway.
No-one minded his truly massive amount of incoming money that seemed to be coming from absolutely nowhere. He covered it up with sufficient donations to several banks. The tax inspectors who were still curious unfortunately died in a coincidental drive by shooting by the Hoods.
Yes, everything was going just fine for Thomas. He was at his desk in his opulent office which had the perfect view of the nicer parts of the city, reading the newspaper of the city, the Liberal Guardian. The headline, however, was bad news. Firey shootout in the Green Eyed park? Shit, that was Mafiya territory. Big mafiya territory. If the Irish Mob attacked there, it was a ballsy move but it seemed to work. However, something about it made Azur edgy...
He picked up the phone on his desk and called his friend Vimes, who could probably shed some light on the situation.
"Chief of Police S. Vimes." said Vimes. "Who is this?"
"It's Thomas." said Thomas, twirling the line a bit with his index finger. "Listen, I need some information on that gangland shooting."
"Ah. Why?" asked Vimes. The annoying thing about Vimes was that he either knew Azur inside out or didn't have a clue. Either way it was frustrating.
"The Irish Mobsters and the Mafiya are at peace, Vimes, this is just off."
"Well, we found out it's probably not what the press are saying, as is usual. It's probably the work of a lone gunman. We got forensics on it, though I might as well ask one of those psychic detectives from the television to come down and take a look for all the good it will do."
"I see. Who's the gunman by your estimations?"
"Probably a vigilante or mercenary, wields an automatic, and very good at his job."
"Hm. Alright, any other info?"
"Well, I do have something about Red...You know, the Phoneix."
"Do tell." said Thomas, calmly. Shit. Shit shit shit.
"He's been doing some... charity work." said Vimes. "Some businessman got talked up by him, apparently throwing open his doors to the homeless and the poor."
"How did it go?" said Thomas, beginning to lean back in his chair.
[11+3+5=19] "Very well. Good publicity for the man, Rodric I think his name was. They're thinking of making it into an actual event." said Vimes.
"Very interesting, Vimes. Our friend Red seems to be off the rat run entirely and in the opposite direction, eh?"
"I don't really care to be perfectly--"
"Excellent! Goodbye, Vimes!"
Azur slammed the phone down on it's stand, cracking the plastic slightly, before Vimes could respond. He stood up and briskly walked over to a sofa, picked up a fluffy pillow, and put the pillow against his face quickly, then began to scream into it's soft fabric.
The Phoenix was back. Oh god, the Phoenix was back.
*
Carpenter was an infinitely sad person.
Nothing ever went right for him. First, his parents left him to rot in that orphanage. The only thing he got from his parents was his green eyes. Apparently that was a family trait. So, the orphanage matron beat and abused him because of the bible or the voices in her head or whatever the hell was her problem. She burned to death in a fire two years after Johnny left. One of his many regrets was that he was not there to see it.
So, when he got adopted, everything changed. Now he had parents! A sister! It was the best feeling of his life to have somewhere to belong to, somewhere to feel like home. He was 8 then. He didn't know that life wasn't Santa Claus, it was a loan shark that broke your legs when you didn't pay up and had an interest rate that was not measured by days, but by seconds.
He got a job. He got a wife (Tara, raven haired and beautiful as the sunrise on a beach), and maybe he could get enough money to get out of this goddamn city and somewhere better. Anywhere was better. New York? Miami? San Fran? Hell, get out of America entirely, the big fucked up place, go somewhere like Dublin, or London, or Tokyo, or... Whatever looked good on a map.
Of course that went tits up. He didn't consider himself a drinker, he just liked having a shot of whiskey every now and then. It made him feel less... lesser. Like an actual person. That spiraled out of control when he started to sneak in whiskey in a thermos, pretending it was coffee. When the bosses actually checked, well...
He was fired. Tara left. His family disowned him. He lost his home pretty quickly. Lost what savings he had left.
Now he was homeless. Sometimes he did jobs for the gangs in the area, smuggling guns and drugs. He was a hobo, who cared? It was all Johnny could do to get more whiskey, that sweet opiate, the ambrosia of the damned and the lost. It was so cold nowadays, colder then the days of his childhood where the sun shined every day (Not the orphanage days though, every day was dark then), and now the only way to warm himself up was the drink...
Then the man in red came. That changed a lot.
It was hard shaking the alcohol, and sometimes he just wanted to stop. So why didn't he?
[19+3=20 due to capping] Hard to say. It just felt like that would be a bad idea. So he fought past the withdrawal pangs, and eventually they just stopped coming. His expenses took a massive nose dive. Things were actually going okay for once. He got a few friends to join in. Some managed to kick it, some didn't, but soon he had an actual collection of pretty physically fit and without much to do.
Johnny didn't really have a guideline for this sort of thing, but he thought things were going to go well.
Lloyd Absolon
Richard wasn't a bad guy. He was a police officer after all, and how could a police officer be bad? Richard was a cop on the beat and wasn't unhappy about it. In fact it was fun at the start. First on the scene, before the action got cold and everyone started investigating, the one who pulled the gun on the perps and arrested people. Detectives were the smartasses, but the beat cops got it done.
Then it got weird. People higher on the ladder then him started taking him aside and telling him to stop asking about that possible drug lab he saw on fifth street. Gangsters started laughing and tossing Richard twenties when he said he was going to need to take him downtown. When he did take them downtown, the mayor (The goddamn mayor!) would call the warden and soon the gangsters were back on the street.
Richard felt less like a police officer and more like a cardboard cut out. Whenever he arrested a jaywalker or some non-affiliated drug dealer, it was a message to everybody with prying eyes. Citizens, we're not a bunch of guys who do nothing at all and let criminals run wild as long as they pay us some cash for the pleasure, we're actually a functioning police department.
Sad thing was, that would be an achievement in this city. Even Detroit had higher standards. Even the Russian police force would look down on this city's police.
He was sent to investigate a disturbance in the rust streets, a bunch of run-down factories and abandoned mills. Richard was rapidly learning that "disturbance" was code in this city's police department for "buzz off for a few hours, we gotta do something shady without you around, you possible whistleblower". Oh well. Sometimes he could pretend he was an actual cop, walking down the street in his shiny boots and raincoat.
He kicked a can while he walked. So, a kid had heard grinding and mechanical noises from the old factory down the street. Richard recognized the address. That was the old Absolon place, wasn't it? That crashed and burned a few years ago cos the guy was following the Charles Dickens method of management. The unions went nuts and his production rate was a joke.
Richard hated these old factories. They were always filled with crackheads, PCP nuts, and some of those weird homeless guys who just went crazy for no real reason and started swinging a lead pipe at you. The rust streets were also the place where the serial killers dumped the bodies, and this city might as well have called itself the serial killer capital of the world because it had too many serial killers for it's own good.
Richard saw the factory. It was a nice looking place, even after all these years of abandonment. The Absolon guy was really into his aesthetics, lot of brass and classy architecture. However, inside, the lights were on. Richard assumed the weird homeless guys. They had a habit of doing bizarre shit when they got past the "murder death kill" stage of their insanity. They painted glyphs on the ground and all over the walls, made shrines to dead crows and dead teenage runaways they butchered, and made statues of old dolls. Not fun stuff to see when it's the middle of the night and you're not sure if they're gone or if they're waiting for you. Richard really didn't want an encounter with them but he had to check it out. He took out his pistol and stepped through the large gap in the gate.
The factory seemed to grow in size and tower above him as he approached. He pushed open a metal door under which light shined through, and stepped inside. The door entered into a large open antechamber which seemed to be the loading bay for trucks to take the finished product from the factory, but now the trucks were long gone. The light seemed to be Christmas lights hung liberally on the ceiling.
He gripped his gun tighter, feeling sweat bind it to the metal, and looked for entrances further into the factory. He headed to one and opened it, heading into a corridor. Richard walked down the corridor, the clacks of his feet against the broken tiles seeming way too loud. Inside, he was taking bets on when the hobos would jump out at him and try to brain him with a bit of brick. An optimistic view would to say "any moment now".
As he headed deeper into the factory, he found that the area became cleaner and cleaner as he went on. That was odd. Usually the hobos lived in dirty and nasty places and made them dirtier and nastier just by their existence. Something was up. Someone was actually trying to clean the place up. Was this going to turn into a gangland thing? That was very risky. But what kind of gang ran in the rust streets? Everyone was too freaked out to go there, there wasn't any market there for anything except crack, and even then the dealers had carved out their turf there and the trade was static there. Richard felt something in his stomach telling him that something was awfully wrong here.
There was the sound of mechanical clicking. As the cop, you learn to appreciate the small sounds. The cocking of a gun, the lightest grunt, the sound of a knife being drawn, all these sounds needed to be memorized and acted against or you'll get some nasty scars from whoever's making them. He pointed his gun in the direction of the sound, and saw.
A fucked-up mechanical version of a human, all brass and steel, with soulless lenses where there should be eyes, and creepy tombstone-shaped rows of teeth that looked more like the bars of a jail cell then an actual set of human's teeth.
"Query." it said in a hollow voice. "Identify self."
That's about when Richard's mind broke in half in pure shitting terror. When he came to, he was about five blocks away, had apparently fired every single pistol round in his handgun, and he had found he had soiled himself.
*
...
REINITIATING SELF
Damage Report
Right Arm = DAMAGED GUNSHOT
Head = DAMAGED GUNSHOT
Torso = DAMAGED GUNSHOT
All other systems reading optimal.
Intruder escaped. Inform local manager about intrusion.
Robert
To get a good place to make a meth lab, you had to find the right place. Subways were always a good one, there were lots of abandoned stations and no-one hung around there often. Dog swore by them, you just needed to add the needed equipment and no-one bothered you. The cops wouldn't even see it under the heat of the building above.
Dog was a typical gangbanger, but he was smarter then any. He could find places where the cops couldn't find you, literal and legal blindspots in both the gang's and the police's eyes, where to get the best weapons and the best people for a job. Dog wasn't a killer, he was just very good at finding places. He got a lot of jobs, some of which were finding good places for meth labs. Those always paid well by the Cartel.
He was walking down the dark tunnel with his flashlight's beam bouncing between the ceiling and the roof as he walked. Something was off as he got closer and closer to the station, but he couldn't tell what it was. Dog didn't like this feeling, and kept his free hand close to his gun that he had only used before once.
The station itself was as usual, abandoned and dusty. Then there was a problem. There was fans here already. It was cool, there was industrial floodlights that lit up the whole place, and in the center of the station there was a strange device that looked like a mish-mashed combination of a car engine, a computer, and a briefcase for putting the nuclear button in.
Dog climbed off the rail and onto the station, then cautiously walked over to the device. There was a blue button on the briefcase, near the latch. Dog tried to jiggle the case open, but it could not budge. Sighing, he pressed the button. The briefcase immediately opened to show a beautiful, glowing metal. Elerium has an error with it. It will absorb any energy in a nearby area in order to keep glowing.
Dog fell over without any feeling as his nerves switched off in his legs. His flashlight smashed as he landed. The feeling of nothingness crept up more and more, making him unable to move. Knowing not what to do, he began to scream. The elerium didn't effect it's creator, no, but he was different from a human anyway. It will effect anyone else, however.
Dog kept screaming until the nothingness reached his chest, then he began to gag and choke as his heart and lungs stopped. Finally, it all stopped for Dog. Elerium is more dangerous in it's raw form then some forms of uranium. It will kill you near instantly, and if you avoid this you will at best be paralyzed from the ankle down.
Within the briefcase the elerium glowed so beautifully, like an impossibility.
Elton Peterson
Elton was a good employee. He worked pretty well, and he didn't mess about like some of the others. He was honest, too. Tara liked him.
Tara had been working in Lincoln Motors since she had been 12, and when Lincoln died in his bed at age 74 when she was 22, she was happy enough to learn it was hers now. She would be happy working for whoever decided to own it. It wasn't such a bad place. It was in Mafiya territory but Tara never bothered them and they never bothered her. She had only called the cops once and that was when that guy wanted to take a swing at her for telling him the engine couldn't be repaired without paying more then the payment for checking it out.
Really, the Mafiya were better peacekeepers then the police. Trouble came to Lincoln's Motors like drunks came to AA meetings.
Back onto Elton, good kid. However, when she found that her tools were on his worktable and several materials missing, she knew something was up. While he was on duty fixing a car, she decided to pose the question. Tara walked over to him as he was leaning over the hood of some retrofitted Dodge Challenger that Tara wished she could own one day.
"Heya, Elton." she said.
"Hi." said Elton.
"How's the dodge? What's the problem with it?"
"Something went wrong with the engine itself, it can't start up properly. Everything else is fine. It could be the spark plugs or it could be a problem with the rest of the ignition, I'm checking it out."
"Oh. You replacing the plugs?"
"Yeah. First things first, right?"
"It'd be easier replacing the spark plugs then replacing the whole ignition... Listen, Elton, I need to talk to you about something."
Elton paused in his fixing for just a second, then kept on going. He's definitely worried. Maybe not worried about that specific thing, but definitely something. "Go on." he said.
"I don't mind you fixing stuff up on the job, or tinkering, or whatever you're doing. It's just that, would you telling me what exactly you're doing first? I know you're not into that criminal stuff, but I still want to take precautions and make sure you're not doing anything that might make the cops edgy." Tara explained. Elton paused again, then kept working.
"... Alright."
"What were you working on?"
"Just a project. Little mechanical device. Nothing... illegal."
Tara nodded, then said goodbye and walked off. She knew that was all she was going to get out of him for now. What she did not hear was Elton's sigh of relief.
Merlin
Fifth of July
Sooo... Promised I'd write a diary when I get adopted, and now I am.
My name is Matthew Peters. I am 12 years old, and am an orphan. Originally I lived in an orphanage, but now I don't. Which I am really happy for. When I grow up, I don't know what I wanna be. Everyone has their lives planned out, but every adult I know isn't doing what they want to do. Apart from the guy who adopted me, but I don't know what his deal is.
He calls himself Merlin. I don't know why either. He picked me out of a crowd of preening kids, all of whom looked cuter then me cos they were younger. Maybe I looked more pitiable cos I wasn't making an effort? Though, I don't think he's the type to pity...
He needs me as a guide. I don't get it. He makes me kinda... dunno. He's just odd.
He apparently doesn't have a house. Our orphanage has amazing standards. I told him we should stay at a hotel for a while, and he went with my opinion. Now we're walking around. Get back to you when we find a hotel.
Tenth of July
Don't worry diary, everything is explained. He's a hippy. We stayed at a hostel because that was pretty much free, and now he's teaching me hippy stuff. Oh well, at least he's checking around with me for a good place to settle down. The hostel's okay anyway. Better then the matron and those other bastards.
Still, this hippy stuff is sticking in my head. Like numbers, I guess. Guess my mind thinks it's important cos of subconscious and stuff. Lessons always stick cos they ask you to memorize. Guess that makes sense.
Twelfth of July
Okay, diary, something weird happened.
I managed to make a cup move. I was thinking about those lessons about the "element of air" and I was drinking some tea out of a cup while I was doing it. I like tea. Coffee was always too zingy to me and Mr Preston was British so he always made tons, and he always let me have a cup with him. Anyway, the cup moved towards me when I was about to pick it up, like it was of it's own movement.
I think one of those hippies in the other beds might have slipped me a tab or something. This is too weird.
Fifteenth of July
[6] Haven't found a house yet... Oh well. It's only for a few more weeks more yet, right? I can live here for a while more.
Haven't applied more of the lessons yet. I'm almost too afraid to, cos it's just too weird and out there. Still, they are starting to make sense, and I think he knows I haven't been applying them, so maybe I should try a few out, but I'm not sure if I want to see if he's right, cos that would just turn my life completely round the bend...
I don't know what to do. This is just too weird.
Meanwhile...
Jules was sitting in the bar, drinking a glass of red wine in a corner booth. It was the expensive stuff, but he could pay. On the jukebox the Pogues were playing I'm A Man You Don't Meet Every Day. That tended to play a lot when Jules was around. He imagined it was the jukebox's way of warning to the rest of the patrons.
He always liked these quiet times. Of course it had been quiet times until Kaleno, that's when the heroes starting fighting back which was always irritating since the heroes were the tastiest because they had such personality and flavor. And it had been still quiet times until those other fellows started meeting him. He can't believe he got killed with a shotgun. A shotgun. A cobbled together piece of trash with not a single magical enchantment. No matter how many people he killed brutally, no matter how many armies he crushed, that fact stuck out like a sore middle finger reminding him.
It irritated him. He took another sip of the wine and poured himself another glass. It was good wine.
Soon, it was here again.
The Stranger was upright in the opposite seat, looking at Jules with black lenses in it's gasmask. Jules gave it a look as the jukebox switched to Dirge For The Planet by Firelake as the bartender wondered why he had even put these songs on the jukebox.
"Sooo, still not talking, then?" Jules asked. The Stranger nodded.
"Can you sign, at least?" said Jules.
The Stranger made it's right hand into a fist then bumped it up against it's forehead, then held it's left hand away from it's chest. It then skidded it's right hand over the left.
"Well, ditto, friend." Jules huffed. "Got anything important?"
The Stranger took a rolled up newspaper out of the pouch on it's hoodie and passed it over to Jules. He opened it and read it. Liberal Guardian, something about a gangland shooting.
"Yeah, the Jack girl. Reminds me of one of my kids, actually. More of the magician type then gambling, though. Anyway, this is old news, why are you giving me this?" said Jules.
The Stranger shook it's head then made held out it's arms, palms facing the sky, in a sort of "What are we going to do?" gesture.
"I tell you, we're going to wait because you couldn't bother acting this Spring. If we attack now the others will notice. They didn't have their eyes on them then, but now if we make a move they make a move against us. We wait until we get an opportunity."
The Stranger thumped it's fist on the table, making a loud bang.
"If you don't like it, then go ahead, act without me. See how far you get."
The Stranger stood up and began to walk away, then stopped and walked back to sit again.
"See, so. We wait." said Jules. The Stranger looked to the ground in frustration in an almost teenage pout. Jules had it right in his hands. He grabbed the eye of a passing waitress and said "A bottle of..."
He looked to the Stranger. It shrugged.
"... Beer?"
The Stranger shook it's head and made a sign at the waitress.
"Oh, uh..." The waitress said. "My mother's deaf, uh... I think he wants... cola?"
The Stranger made a thumbs up sign. The waitress smiled and walked off, obviously feeling confident from interpreting a deaf customer correctly, which was what they should have taught in liberal arts. Jules looked at the Stranger and smirked.
"Nice to waiters, not so nice to the rest of humanity?" he said.
The Stranger shrugged in a way Jules thought meant in the context "I like people who do me favors". He couldn't tell; he tried reading the Stranger's mind and it was rather painful to say the least. This didn't mean he wasn't good at reading people anyway, and when you came right down to it the Stranger was basically a person. Well, it had the same mannerisms. Jules didn't like not knowing much about the Stranger.
"Interesting how that waitress didn't notice the gasmask. Weird how no-one seems to ask about that, right?"
The Stranger tilted it's head in a sarcastic fashion.
"You thought about it, right? Of course you did."
The waitress (Who Jules knew was Veronica Keyes) came back and laid the cola on the table. The Stranger took a generous amount of change from it's pocket and handed it to the waitress. It was a nice tip, the waitress certainly thanked it profusely. The Stranger waved off the kindness, and soon she left.
Jules remained quiet for the duration, drinking his wine. The Stranger looked at him suspiciously.
"You do know that some of that change was in pennies from 1834, right? Might be a bit of a generous tip..."
The Stranger froze a second, then shook it's head. Jules was genuinely surprised when it lifted it's gasmask a few inches up and began to drink it's coke. It was silent as it did so. Even with his powers of clairvoyance, he couldn't see much further then where he did around the Stranger.
"You really do care about your identity, don't you? I can't even see if you have anything under those clothes."
The Stranger shrugged again, and put down the coke. Then, it was gone.
Jules finished off his wine over the night, and soon was gone from both memory and location. But the Green Eyed Man is never truly gone from a place.