Saturday, June 29, 2013

Interrogatories [MoHN]


Twilight

After the fight, the clean-up crew. Quick and sure and efficient. Snails and Tails shows up at the apartment with them and grimaces this sharp, twisting look when they show her the remains of what is identified as Gerhart. Whatever pieces of him are recovered and cleansed, and a few days later there's a funeral for the old man in the bowls of 1999 Broadway. Word passes on the barking chain and most of the attendees are Gnawers of Bone of one sort or another.

The dead woman with her doubled row of teeth and the poison sacs grown into her cheeks like tumors and her brassy hair and her gold cross on its gold chain: will be cleansed and incinerated.

The living woman though: they bring in a reinforced van, chain her down and wrap her up. That's the last Hector and Jack see of her or hear of her for a few days. Days during which Hector tells a story to Tamsin and another to Jack and Tamsin tells a story to the librarian and -

-

The next day or the day after, later Hector and Jack - Jack, the philodox, particularly - are summoned, not to the city Sept, but to a warehouse in a nondescript commercial neighborhood a solid 5-10 miles from the city center. Tamsin's welcome to tag along too. Hector (and Jack's?) packmate, see. That's how these things work.

"We haven't been able to get much out of her," Snails and Tails tells them, a lean, grim smile gracing the scarred curve of what was once a sensuous mouth. " - it's not like she knows what's happening to her. She's sort of fighting it but humans are so damn soft. Anyway, a theurge is coming later to exorcise her. That'll kill her but at least she'll die clean, right.

"Give her a chance to really get right with god." Not wry, that; an undercurrent of rage in the young woman's voice. After all it was her boyfriend's cousin's uncle they were fucking eating, in there.

"Thought you might wanna get in on the last bit of questioning though. See what you can get outta her; at least see if she's got any truth left. Mostly the bane's rage is consuming her so bad she don't have much awareness. Just babbles that god-shit. Seems to've spent that rage though so maybe she can think straight for five or ten minutes. C'mon.

"Oh, HQ ain't too interested in this, truth to tell. Got bigger fish to fry with the Horror creep-creeping around. So you wanna keep digging seems like you got free rein long's you check in proper when warranted."

--

One of the old nested office serves as a cell. Snails and Tails leads them through the secretarial bay, past the Garou On Watch, into the office proper.

This is their prisoner, this is their prize:

a mousey, thirty-something woman with stringy brown hair and the thin, sunken disposition of a lifelong smoker. She's missing enough teeth from her mouth to make her seem older than she is. She stinks - of rage and bile and shit, quite frankly. Blood crusts her throat where Hector tore it the fuck out, but those near fatal wounds seem to have closed already.

She is strapped to a chair and looks drunk. Looks glassy-eyed. Looks haunted and sick and twisted, like she's always fighting off the urge to puke. Sometimes she looks like she wants to rip their faces off. Sometimes she looks terrified. Actually, pretty much all the time she looks like a terrified madwoman who wants to rip their faces off.

And she misses her mother.

--

The two Galliards, manipulative, persuasive. And then Jack, all bluff bullying, all physical threat.

She mistrusts and despises them; calls them agents of the devil-on-earth, satan's minions, black demons, says that she can see beneath their human skins. She knows, she knows the tricks they play, the windy rubbish they talk. The way they cling to this world. She wants them to kill her; she wants to go home.

The time evolves; they gradually come to understand that the younger of the two women has always been religious. Has always believed in a very immediate and very literal and very unbending biblical reality. Has believed that the apocalypse (and they know she does not mean their Apocalypse, but another one) was imminent and immanent. She cites humans they have never heard of, televangelists selling holy water and prayer clothes and snakeoil on TV. She was always a Free Will Holy Roller and prayed her whole life that her mother would turn her life around, and then her mother come up out of prison this last time, and it seemed like nothing had ever, would ever change, come up out of the halfway house changed and on fire with the holy spirit.

Bearing the mark of his Name, the woman says, agitated, somewhere between the promise of rapture and the ruin of rage her body is changing, to produce and contain.

She shows them her own mark. To ward off their demon menace, as if it could somehow banish them from her presence, preserve her soul against all occupations: the small tattoo in the shape of a cross inside her right wrist.

Dorlene - and that is her name, they learn from a driver's license rather than the woman herself - was so transported by her mother's conversion that she started attending the new church. The House of God. The House of the Covenant. The House of the Covenant of God with His People in Exile on the Earth.

Jesus was meant to rapture his people and bring them home to god. Dorlene has always known this. Has known this her entire life. Has been watching for the signs since she was old enough to know Him. They were meant for better things than this world of sin. This world were old men and mothers -

- well, Dorlene never had an easy life. Not with a mother like Carlita, in and out of prison, in and out of addiction, in and out of consciousness, sometimes vicious sometimes loving never stable rarely sober. At the edge of ruinous poverty, trapped in a privation from which she could never rise. No wonder she grabbed onto the prospect of perfection, of transportation, the promise of the man with the hair and the smile and the teeth and the holy water and the healing hands framed and beaming in her cheap old console television. No wonder she sent them money, all of them, seeds sown against the future, to reap god's rewards.

She was wrong all along though, she knows now. Always thought it was coming, just around the corner, this avalanche of darkness at an end. What she did not understand is that the devil was never trying to bring it all about. He's playing a different, much longer game. Trying to prevent the end from coming. Trying to stop the conflagration. Trying to thwart God's plan by keeping them all here, on this earth.

Which is no more than the topmost layer of his many Hells, in which they are all mired.

You have to work for the end - that's what Dorlene never knew. Never knew before Carlita introduced her to the Pastors Black. Because if it does not come - and soon - they will be trapped here for all eternity. The next world must come. God's cleansing fire must rain down. The next world will be glorious, and will only come about on the ashes of this one.

Even then, Dorlene fought it. The fire they give her in her body. The holy wrath god give her to work in his name. Fought and fought and fought it until the night they came.

Twisted men. Servants of the devil. His demons and his wolves and his attendants, and tore down her mother right in front of her.

She is so grateful that Carlita died with her soul clean and white and holy.

--

There's not much more to be had from the woman. She's both frightened and scared and confessional and on fire with religious fervor, twisted with rage. And in truth: so tertiary that she knows Not Much.

But they question her: and unearth this much, and perhaps more.

When the cliaths are satisfied that they have all they can get from the prisoner, an Adren theurge comes from the Sept to Exorcise the bane. So at least Dorlene will die, but she will die clean. It is a sort of mercy.

The only they have to offer the twisted woman.

Rabid Jack

Jack doesn't expect to get more out of the prisoner than Tails and Snails, but that doesn't keep him from wanting to hear the filth right from the orifice spewing it.

The woman speaks of her mother first.

"She waitin' on you, Miss Dorlene. The longer this takes, the longer 'til you see her 'gain."

Where the others have their own way of going about things, Law in War's method is wholly physical and meant to inspire a fear deeper than even that of the apocalypse. He bears down on her. His cheek presses against her own, hand held hard on her jaw to keep her from biting, and to growls and breathes into her ear. At no point is she given a moment's repreive. At no point is he anything less than upon her, pressing and pushing and swatting like a domineering (dominating) animal. Like this will never end. Like she will get no rapture. It gives her a demon to castigate and quote scripture to, rhetoric they can all try to pick apart later.

Here are the jaws of a monster with Rage waiting to rise like the fires of Hell and consume her. Here are his fingers that close around her hair and lift her from the ground (chair and all). Here are the promises of his knuckles, not idle threats, that crack against her ribs before she is thrown to the ground on the throne (rack) of punishment she is bound to.

Here is her own tribulation. Here is her own passion.

If they are His Children (yes, he knew of the God of Men) exiled to Earth, he is their punishment. He did not know the history of Christianity, but he could extrapolate from what he heard on the news and in the roadhouses his family passed through. Then yes, here are their tormenters. Jack wants to hear all she has to say in the face of what she believes in's antithesis. Like maybe it would change anything. Give her hope that maybe the hand of her God would strike them down and she would be freed.

And when she is finished, when she is so thoroughly broken, Jack ceases. Jack is merciful. He is an animal with few scruples, but even he takes no joy in tormenting someone now beyond that word's reach.

He does not leave the room. The Theurge comes to do his exorcism and Jack first remains at the side of the-thing-who-was-Dorlene. For as long as he can, silent throughout the moon-priest's ritual, before he turns to Tamsin and Hector again as her exorcism nears its climax.

"That rot's gone come out of her 'n' go crawlin' back to whatever tit fed it. Gone want to get back t' its masters. And it has masters, tell you that. Someone takin' the blasphemy of the Black Spiral 'n' puttin' it in fomori heads. Takin' them and turnin' them into a cult. Wouldn't be surprise if it were the bastards themselves. Gone return to its master t' tell 'em we know. Can't let that happen."

The Healing Place [MoHN]


Twilight

Ms. Avery Chase has the invitations. $500 a head and grace enough not to print the price in black and white on the invitations to the James Bond-themed Casino Royale fundraiser for something called The Healing Place - a drug treatment facility current under redevelopment in the East Colfax neighborhood in Denver. There was a small request for cocktail attire required, black or white tie requested, however, at the bottom of the tickets.

Cocktail hour at 6:30, dinner at 7:30 sharp, the invitations designate. Games of Chance from 9:00 to ?? And come the appointed hour the Grand Hyatt is full of men and women, some in cocktail attire, others dress in formal white Bond-style suits. In the hallway, glossy posterboards are covered with artists' renderings of The Healing Place as a serene bastion of calm in the midst of one of the city's worst neighborhoods. Standing near or close to the adverts for the treatment facility are somewhat more shabbily attired, hang-dog looking locals, who have been prepped and polished to chat with the upper crust about their grateful experiences with this agency or that agency, their excitement about the options the new facility will bring to the neighborhood.

There's been some bad press lately, see. Just enough that the zoning board's getting pushback for fast-tracking approval last year. Not quite enough that anyone's started investigating whether open meeting laws were violated, and the folks behind the facility would like to keep it that way.

Jack Crenshaw, and his wife Donna, stand close to the door leading from the hallway and lounge where cocktails are being served to the ballroom where the dinner will be held. He's a zoning board member, rich as hell, and a former CEO for some pharma company he sold off to a larger pharma company a half-dozen years ago, making him rich as hell. She has had one too many shots of botox, and that plasticine feeling has settled into her smile. Still, the two are charming and engaging and shake hands and greet their more well-connected guests with the sort of effusive familiarity one always sees at such dinners.

Avery Chase

Two feelings warred in Avery when she found out that her father had a prior engagement that would prevent him from attending the fundraiser for the Healing Place: the first was a kneejerk embarrassment, perhaps even guilt, that she had so readily assumed he would be available and willing. The mistake was understandable, to be fair to Avery: they have been one another's escorts to various functions for years. But that doesn't stop her from recognizing her misstep, or apologizing for it. She inquires as to his plans.

Which leads to her second reaction: an equally kneejerk shock and discomfort to hear that her father, who in her mind has been celibate since her mother's untimely passing, has a date. Avery was still thoroughly unsettled when she called Calden, and it was perhaps noticable -- not in a shaken tone or anything of that kind, but in the way she apologized more than once for the late notice to the invitation, the glossed-over offer that she would 'take care of' procuring a tuxedo for him and having it fitted, in his home if that was more convenient, and of course he wouldn't have to worry about accomodations, it's just that she already RSVP'd for two and her brother is well below the acceptable age for a casino night, and if Calden would consider attending with her she would be most grateful,

and he knows, perhaps, that something is awkward for her about this by the fact that she doesn't use a Sexy Voice when she says that.

All in the past, now. Avery is quite settled when she arrives with Calden at the fundraiser, and she decided to go with the mod look tonight instead of the long, sensual gown favored by Bond's perpetually doomed love interests. The dress is short-sleeved and high-hemmed, all silver sparkles over black. She wears a pair of black hose beneath them and mid-high boots with pointed toes and high heels, a modern concession to the go-go boot era. Her jewelry is minimal but impactful: her earrings are diamond and platinum, dangling in chandeliers from her lobes. She's gone quite mid-60s for her hair and makeup, as well, the lip neutral and the eyes dramatically smoky, the hair teased just a bit and falling in waves around her shoulders.

They get martinis from waiters passing by with trays full of them. Standing beside Calden, only reaching 6 feet of height herself in those heels, she points out the Crenshaws, murmuring in his ear their names, what they do, and so on.

Calden White

The first apology gets Avery forgiven. Or rather: Calden tells her it's not necessary to apologize, really, he didn't have plans anyway this weekend. The second apology -- well, she gets halfway through before he interrupts her gently but firmly, telling her:

Don't apologize. I'd be delighted to escort you. You know I love spending time with you.

Still. Perhaps the apologies are understandable. She is, after all, so very gracious, so very courteous, so very correct and well-mannered. She is also so very careful not to encroach on his time unannounced, even if he's long since tripped over that line. So: she apologizes again, or she doesn't, and either way the discussion moves on to the when, the where, the dress code. She offers to have him fitted, which makes him laugh:

"Miss Chase, this might come as a shock to you, but this particular barbaric cowherd happens to own a tuxedo. I'll let you know if the moths have gotten to it, though. Otherwise: see you at eight?"

And so she does see him at eight. That's when he pulls up her drive, walks up to her door. It feels a little like prom night or something, which is how he feels every time he shrugs into this particular penguin suit. It's not new. It's not a particularly flashy or a la mode cut, either. It's classic and well-made, though, and well-tailored; fitted sleekly to his frame in a way that almost makes him look like he lives and breathes and exists in these clothes. At least, it doesn't make him look like a barbaric cowherd shoehorned into a tuxedo.

He has a bouquet for her when he meets her at her door. But it's just a handful of wildflowers plucked on his way to his truck. And his shoes -- dress shoes, thank you very much, not cowboy boots -- have a bit of dirt around the heels. He doesn't care, though, and she doesn't really have time to notice. His eyes heat up at the sight of her, and she

has to push him away before he smears her lipstick all over her face.

They leave the 'bouquet' in the car. Her car, driven by her meticulous Chauncey: a Bentley as black as ink. Calden smirks when he sees it. When he climbs into the back he takes her hand, and he keeps smirking a while until -- three minutes down the road -- he quietly tells her that this was pretty much exactly the sort of car he thought she owned.

For a man who spends 90% of his waking hours around cattle, he seems rather relaxed and at ease about it all. Their conversation on the way there is quiet and comfortable. When they arrive, he steps out first, beating Chauncey to her door. He hands her out. Her heels are ridiculous. They make her six feet tall, and he has a suspicion that even if her date were five-six in lifts she wouldn't have changed a thing about her attire tonight. They go in. He takes a martini from a tray. She murmurs about the Crenshaws in the sparse few seconds before the two couples meet. Calden smiles; shakes Jack Crenshaw's hand firmly and takes Donna's hand gently. For the most part, though, he follows Avery's cues -- conversational and otherwise.

Calden White

[six. at six.]

Avery Chase

Avery has to give Calden her address. The last and only time he has been to her true residence was when he was so drunk that she wouldn't let him drive anywhere until he'd had an hour to wander around and some coffee. It is still enormous. It is still impressive. It is earlier, though, and seeing it in daylight is revealing: here and there one can see the details that mark it as the polo club stables it used to be, before it was renovated and renovated and turned into the palace it is now. A middle-aged man in grey slacks and vest over a crisp white shirt answers the door, and he is also there when Calden looks like he wants to eat Avery alive, so... perhaps Calden doesn't do that. She is delighted with the flowers, and hands them to the butler.

They have a couple of drinks in one of her sitting rooms downstairs. Her father is on his date. A young woman in grey slacks and a pale pink short-sleeved sweater is the one who comes into the sitting room with the flowers, now in a cut-crystal vase, to set them on a table between Calden and Avery. Her brother walks by briefly, in shorts and a tank top, carrying a basketball. He's quite a bit younger than Avery, well-formed and keen-eyed like she is, fair like she is, a little less practiced in his politeness. Calden can feel the curiosity, the awkwardness, and perhaps a bit of stiffness in his demeanor even as 'Oakley' shakes his hand and says that it's a pleasure to meet him. He has a good handshake, though. He and his sister share what seems like a telepathic smile before he heads out to deposit a ball through a hoop multiple times.

When it's closer to six-thirty, Avery slips her arm through the crook of Calden's and they walk out to Chauncey, waiting with the -- vintage -- Bentley. Chauncey's beard is trimmed and his mustache curled and he is dressed all in black, with cufflinks in the shape of ramparts. He drives. They chat. Calden beats Chauncey to the door, appalling Chauncey and making Avery give a gentle Look to her driver before they head inside.

"I'm so pleased to meet you," Avery says, much like her brother said to Calden, as she shakes each of the Crenshaws' hands. "I must give you my father's regrets; he's very interested in your plans but had a prior engagement. Mr. White heroically stepped in at the last minute."

Avery Chase

[perception + alertness!]

Dice: 4 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 2, 5) ( fail )

Calden White

There's ten years between Calden and Avery. Another ten between Avery and her brother. And that's not even taking into account the fact that Calden is Avery's date, which carries connotations no brother ever ever ever EVER wants to think about. Small wonder there was awkwardness there when the two kinsmen met. At least: it was there on Oakley's end. Not so much on Calden's, though. He's one of five siblings spanning nearly twenty years. Age differences and significant others were a fact of life in the White household.

Still. Oakley's as polite as his sister. And Calden tells her so on the way to the car. He means it as a compliment.

Now, at the gala:

"I keep telling her," Calden adds, smiling, "it was my pleasure. Thanks for having us." And -- unless Avery has reason to tarry -- he starts to move on.

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (3, 4, 7, 7, 9) ( success x 3 )

Twilight

"You're more than welcome," smiles Donna Crenshaw. Or rather: tries to smile. The intention is there in the movement of her mouth but does not really change anything otherwise about her face. The frame of her eyes or the glazed light in them. She's too plasticene to be expressive, and has shaken hands and nodded to goodness knows how many people she has seen tonight. This is to Calden. An attempt at a benign smile is cast at Avery, but as with the smile she offers Calden, it is no more than an attempt.

Jack Crenshaw is more focused on Avery. He's tall and fairly thin, heavily tanned, with a golfer's stance even in the receiving line. "Pleasure's ours, Ms. Chase - " extending his hand to Avery, then Calden. "We have some literature you can take home with you, and if he's interested in making a more substantial donation, I'd be happy to set him up with a site tour, whatever he'd like. Just have someone contact my assistant Debbie."

"Oh," Donna inserts herself here. "Debbie's wonderful. Gets you anything you need."

And then the crowd is moving on, and Avery and Calden with it.

Twilight

Jack Crenshaw has a small tattoo in the shape of a cross on the inside of his right wrist. Calden notices when they shake hands.

Avery Chase

[primal urge!]

Dice: 4 d10 TN8 (2, 3, 3, 4) ( fail )

Avery Chase

They go through the receiving line. They shake hands and they talk about literature and Donna fails to smile and Avery is gracious, is endearing, is quite genuinely delighted at the prospect of taking some pamphlets home to her father to go over and discuss if it would be better to donate directly or set up an endowment after it's built or what-have-you.

Other than Donna's immobile face, Avery notices nothing particular out of the ordinary. She doesn't gossip about them behind their backs, either. It doesn't even occur to her to do so.

Calden White

The human eye has a knack for the unusual, and sometime in the midst of that hearty handshake, Calden's is drawn down to Jack's hand. His wrist. What he sees there pings a little on his awareness -- but really; it's nothing that out of the ordinary. Maybe Jack was superstitious. Or religious. Or just had a wilder youth or something. Anyway; the handshake ends in seconds. They move on in moments. Calden sips his martini; he is introduced to people who likely don't recognize him

-- though a very few might think they've seen him somewhere before, and more than a few would have eaten at steakhouses he supplies, shopped at upscale markets he stocks, perhaps even seen a few of those horrid ad campaigns about locally sourced beef featuring a decidedly rugged-jawed, red-flanneled Calden. Plus cows --

and who may or may not recognize his family name. Who may or may not know them as an old, reasonably well-connected and well-respected lot, but nothing ... stratospheric, really. And no aspirations in that direction either.

A hardworking bunch. But merchants and tradesmen, to use a medieval analogy. Not nobility, not by a long shot. His face is shaved tonight, he comports himself well, and he looks good in that tux -- but his hands are rough.

The room opens out, past the receiving line and its assembled glitterati. There's a Casino Royale theme tonight. There are many, many, many men in tuxedos, some of whom wear it better than others; many, many, many women in cocktail dresses, most of whom wear it well enough that their husbands haven't traded them in yet for a newer model. Some of whom wear it well because they are the newer model. Waiters are circulating with martinis and canapes, but Calden is still working on his first drink. He sips. He nods to Avery's friends. When they have a free moment, he bends -- not very far tonight -- and murmurs in the direction of her ear:

"So what exactly is this charity you've taken an interest in?"

Avery Chase

A bit of cucumber with some pate on top and a sprig of something. Avery's eyes light up and she takes one, taking a tidy bite as they begin to circulate. She smiles across the room at a woman about her age that she knows, then turns to Calden as he asks her what he does.

"My father knows more," she admits. "I think they're building a facility on East Colfax to... do something. Addiction recovery, I think." Avery shrugs. She finishes her canape and when she is done she dabs at her lips with the cocktail napkin before tossing it out in a conveniently placed wastebin.

She smiles at Calden. "We could go read some of the literature," she teases, but she's not really teasing.

Calden White

It's good that she's not really teasing, because Calden laughs -- and then he takes her seriously. "Why not. I'm not very good at small talk. Besides, if I'm your escort, I should at least know a little about the party you've taken me to."

And there is literature -- discreetly arranged in areas of the room that aren't too eye-catching. It's a peculiar quirk of the rich and famous: charity as an excuse for decadence, or decadence as an excuse for charity. Either way: mustn't forget the poor and trod-upon. Mustn't let them spoil a good time by being too visible either, though.

Avery Chase

"Darling, you're wonderful at small talk," Avery tells him earnestly, either because she somehow believes it or because she wants him to try. "And to be fair, I don't know much, either. For the past few years I've been painfully out of the loop on our philanthropy. I'm trying to do better."

There's a pause. "I wonder if he's trying to help me do that by 'making plans' tonight." She looks vaguely suspicious of her father, for a moment, as they walk towards one of the little tables and start flipping through brochures.

Calden White

"All right," Calden acknowledges with a faint smirk, "I'm wonderful at small talk. I just prefer to talk large. And since we Whites are still being very bourgeois about making our money and hoarding it all to ourselves, I save my small talk for people who are going to buy my cows."

The smirk relents into a grin, then. He lifts her hand from the crook of his elbow, kissing her fingers, then laying them back where they were. "I'm playing," he adds. "I'm actually having a good time. That's quite the dress you're wearing, and I've already seen you shake your hair back twice."

Oh. The smirk's back again.

"What were his plans, anyway? May I, or dare I ask?"

Twilight

There is literature. There are a few locals there to hand it out too. Men and women wearing second-hand business suits, some with accessories like neck and knuckle tattoos. Others looking vaguely down-and-out without the need for mediocre prison-style tats. The brochures tout The Healing Place as an addiction recovery center with a [psychobabble bullshit] model with a focus on practical skills layered into real-time interaction with the home environment while building practical job and social skills on the rEEntry model. There's a sidebar discussing the success of rEEntry, a halfway house, essentially, for convicts coming out of prison that boasts, thus far, a 0% recidivism rate.

So they're doing something really well or lying like motherfuckers.

Avery Chase

"Tsk," Avery says, to all of it. To him and his bourgeois family! To him and his money-hoarding! To him and saving up all his small talk for people who are going to make him wealthier! To him and his obsession with her hair-shaking! Tsk. She tsks him, then gives a faint shake of her head, her expression discomfited: "He has a date."

With that, Avery approaches one of the knuckle-tattooed men and smiles at him in that way that makes him fall a little bit in love with her. Her hand is out, and though he starts to hand her a brochure, she takes it, and then takes his hand to give it a shake.

"My name is Avery Chase," she says, quite directly, and that directness and those eyes and that dress and the feeling that she might just pin him against the wall and

do something terrifyingly visceral, like actually eviscerating him,

makes him react however he does. But she's smiling. "What's yours?"

Calden White

He has a date. Which makes Calden laugh aloud -- a quick and quickly smothered blurt of real humor. It's one of the few things real in this room. Avery's another one. Just look at that smile, the way she sees that poor fellow they trotted in here as a living billboard. She's as real as sunlight, as real as fire and gold.

Royal, though. And ever so charged with noblesse oblige. There's a faint, quirky half-smile on Calden's face. He doesn't attempt to interrupt the greeting. Raises a hand instead -- a mute half-wave -- before he steals the pamphlet from Avery and opens it up to read.

Twilight

"Dwayne Richards, ma'am." The knuckle-tattooed man returns. He has a military straight bearing and something about his parade-rest posture suggests that he served briefly in the military before embarking on a life of knuckle tattoos and street - street something. "Pleasure to meet you."

And there's something about the way he bear that directness, and returns it to her that Avery might find striking and noticeable. Something about the way he returns her smile with a tight one of his own that is more a grimace - not from that animal reaction to the beast beneath her skin - but fro, instead, some fundamental mismatch between his mouth and his eyes.

"Director of Youth Outreach for rEEntry and a graduate of it myself. Our NA program is the model for the Healing Place and I know what a benefit it'll be to the city. Me I never managed to kick my habit until after I got out of treatment and jail."

[Stuffs.]

Dice: 6 d10 TN9 (3, 3, 5, 5, 6, 9) ( success x 1 )

Avery Chase

[Truth of Gaia: Intelligence + Empathy // Unknown Diff (Dwayne's Manipulation + Subterfuge)]

Dice: 4 d10 TN8 (1, 1, 4, 7) ( fail )

Twilight

It is not a pleasure to meet her. LIE LIE LIE.

He IS director of youth outreach and has been through rEENTRY.

The stuff about the Healing Place and NA and benefit to the city are lies.

True: he did not kick the habit until after he got out of treatment and jail.

Twilight

Other stuffs for laters.

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (4, 4, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 9) ( success x 5 ) [WP]

Avery Chase

"Dwayne, it's a pleasure," Avery says, and there's an evenness and a sincerity to her tone that is neither gushing nor guilty. She lacks the simultaneous rigid pride and secret shame that most of the people in this room have for their wealth, their privilege. She makes it as simple as it can be: taking an interest in him.

He doesn't shrink from her. Well: he's a convict. He's been hardened, hasn't he? She tries not to take that too oddly. What does strike her, however, is that his smile isn't one. It doesn't touch his eyes any more than Donna Crenshaw's face moved when she smiled. She notices that. She is a little more on her guard then. Her eyes, pale blue and ringed in silver, seem to sharpen on him, fierce as a falcon's. It is indeed one of her own tribe's totem spirits that she calls on, and she feels a faint tingle in her ears and her eyes as the mantle of her auspice falls over her.

Her head tips slightly as she is shaking his hand, then gradually letting it go. "I can only imagine what a challenge that was -- not just to go through that, but to come out of it and be able to turn around and help others the way you were helped. It's inspiring, Dwayne."

That sounds a little false. It even stings her own ears. She seems more like the others in this room, the charity wives and philanthropists. She smiles at him though, almost conspiratorially. "What do you think of the people who are pitching a little fit about creating this place? Just anti-gentrification whackjobs?"

Twilight

"Servants of the devil, ma'am. His hand on earth, if you will." Dwayne returns; and now there's a gleam to his eye.

Twilight

TRUE TRUE TRUE.

Calden White

[wait, did avery just lie? EMPAFEE.]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (3, 3, 3, 5, 6) ( success x 1 )

Avery Chase

Some think that to get information, you pretend to agree with the crazy person. You placate. You cajole. You conspire. But there was never a fanatic that didn't love, more than anything else, arguing with someone who disagrees with them.

As soon as she hears that, Avery blinks and draws back a bit. Her tone goes a bit too even, a bit chilled. "Tell me, Mr. Richards, is conversion to the faith a requirement of the program that's being offered? Doesn't that seem a bit... narrow, if the goal is to truly help people?"

Calden White

[percep+alert: HAVE YOU GOT A THINGIE ON YOUR WRIST TOO.]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 3, 9, 9) ( success x 2 )

Twilight

"I don't know the perticulars," the man returns, still in the military-straight and military-ready posture. The gleam is gone from his eyes, though. " - but the program is separate from the church, ma'am. Folks inside ain't even allowed to visit the church, so it ain't 'til I come out I even went there."

Twilight

I don't know hte perticulars: LIE

The next bit about the separation and folks inside not visiting the church is true, but the last bit is sort-of-a-lie.

Twilight

He has a lot of tattoos. One of them is a cross inside his wrist.

Calden White

Truth be told Calden tunes the conversation out once he starts reading that pamphlet. Maybe it's rude of him, but then -- he's a little curious. What he saw on Crenshaw's wrist sticks with him, like a burr in his boot. It's just odd. It's just off. And he's looking for a link, looking for a tie, when

something in Avery's voice pulls him back. His eyes flick up; one eyebrow's cocked. A moment later his expression smooths, and he lifts his head, folding the pamphlet over once and tucking it into his pocket. He'd fallen back a half-step when he started reading. He takes that step back now, coming up beside Avery. His eyes follow the conversation to and fro, to and fro. Then an interjection --

"Sorry, I must have missed it the first time -- what church are we talking about?"

Twilight

And Dwayne Richards' eyes swing to Calden as the latter speaks up. The question comes suddenly, from an unexpected quarter that he answers it automatically, with a steady, solemn pride. "The House of the Covenant of God with His People in Exile on the Earth."

Though once he has uttered the words, his demeanor shifts. He frowns; he knows that something is -

"If you'll excuse me. I think they're calling you in for dinner."

Twilight

ALL TRUE.

Avery Chase

Avery's dark brows tug together. "Well that seems a bit harsh," she says, of not allowing people in the program to even visit the church. Calden interjects a question, and they get the naem of the church, which causes one of those brows to stop tugging inward and just quirk upward.

She doesn't push Dwayne after that. She thanks him mildly for his time, then slips her arm through the angle of Calden's and begins walking, gradually, with him towards the dining hall. Five hundred dollars a plate. The food had better be phenomenal. It's times like these she wishes she had learned the trick of sensing the Wyrm's influence. She should learn that. She just thought that by now she would have a Ragabash to do it for her.

"Whatever else he is," Avery says quietly to Calden, "he's a true believer."

Calden White

Calden is a bit more plainspoken:

"I think he's a fucking cultist, Avery."

At least he's quiet about it, though. They keep their voices down. He does his best to look like he's sweet-talking his lady rather than ... gossiping. Or plotting. Or something. They make their way to the dining hall, but they take their sweet time about it, and Calden detours Avery over to a painting on the wall. They stand in front of it admiringly for a moment. He adds:

"He had a little cross tattooed on his wrist. So did Crenshaw. I'll keep an eye out, but I wouldn't be surprised if everyone connected to this little charity had some tie to this House of Covenant of God of Cults And Extraterrestrials... or whatever it's called."

A moment's pause.

"Should we go to dinner at all?"

Avery Chase

"Any church with a name like that usually is," Avery says quietly as they drift towards dinner. "Claims of absolute truth, mandatory attendance, strict hierarchy, charismatic leaders, isolation of the inner circle from the outer circle from everyone else in the world..."

She exhales. "Some of what he said was untrue. Nothing immediately, glaringly dangerous, but unsettling." A beat. "Certainly enough to justify advising my father that we decline to donate further than the price of the tickets for tonight's event."

Her hand slips down his arm, to his hand, slipping her fingers through his. He is walking them towards a painting, and she lets him, turning to face him. He pauses and asks her if they should leave. She wonders if she should go make herself throw up that canape just to be on the safe (if a bit paranoid) side. Avery puts her lips together. "Yes," she says after a moment of thought. "I want to hear what else they have to say. Mr. Richards was only one angle of illumination."

They start heading towards the dining hall, passing through to take their seats. "Perhaps... leave the food be, however," she murmurs to him. "Just in case."

Twilight

They are seated at a table for eight. Six strangers, or rather four, as two of seats are never claimed by other attendees. The meal is very well-prepared but suffers as all banquet food suffers from requirements of serving en masse and all at once. It follows an orderly progression with wine and beer pairings from amuse bouche to a cold summer soup to salad and so on, while a pleasant hum swims in the air all around them.

At the front of the ballroom, on a raised dais a number of principles are seated at a long straight table, facing out over the crowd. Jack and Donna Crenshaw, of course. Their daughter Cara Crenshaw White, a key policy analyst for the mayor of Denver a few seats down, though she is not joined by her husband tonight. Several of the locals put on display during cocktail hour are up there, as well as an older man, gray hair streaked with brown, seated next to a very attractive thirty-something with blonde hair. Both are dressed a bit more modestly than the Crenshaws, though rather better than the locals.

After the main course, Jack Crenshaw gets up to make a brief speech thanking everyone for their support and generousity, complimenting the attendees on their committment to their fellow human beings. It is brief and positive and gracious, and then he invites his wife up to the podium. Where she introduces Carlos and Christina Black, directors of rEEntry, "which has been such a boon and blessing to so many men and women of Colorado," Donna enthuses. Without really enthusing because, well. Her face just doesn't move.

Carlos offers a brief benediction. Then, beaming at his much younger and much more attractive young wife, he cedes the floor to Christina Black.

--

She is a woman of modest height, mid-thirties, attractive without being too noticeable, until one takes a solid framing look at her and sees, somehow, how very well put together she is. And when she's left alone at the podium, she takes a minute squinting against the spotlight, leaning forward over the stand to squint at the audience against the glare.

"I'm so sorry y'all," is how she begins, a faint southern accent to her voice. "I'm not accustomed to talking to such a well-dressed audience. We serve whoever comes in and we don't care what they're wearing. That's the promise we're making to you tonight too; that's what the Healing Place will do. Bring the message and light of god's mercy to people who have forgotten that the word exists.

"That's what you all are helping us to do.

"The people are in darkness. Now, you may look at me - I was raised in the church. My father was a preacher, and my father's father was a preacher, and the light of god was in my heart from the time I knew how to breath - and you may look at me and say what darkness can she know. How can she understand what her flock sees on the streets of this city every day.

"We live in the darkness every single day.

"When god made this world, he made it - temporary. Temporal, passing. But there are things in this world that the devil makes to hold us here. The way he digs his claws in and makes us value heroin or golf or trees or our diamonds and pearls more than His ineffable love.

"My friends, the truth is, this world was mean to end. And it must end soon, or we will be mired in the devil's filth for all eternity. The truth that most pastors will never tell you is that god meant to call us home before noon. And it is already past the dinner hour."

--

"So you see, we all walk in darkness. Swim in it. Sometimes in the shadow of addiction to drugs, but just as often in our addition to the temporal realities of our lives. As much as I thought I loved god my whole life, it wasn't until I met my husband, the Reverend Carlos Black, that I realized I'd spent all this time enshadowed and enslaved by this material world world, the way these unfortunate men and women and enshadowed and enslaved by the substances they covet the way King David covered Bathsheba.

"The final battle is coming soon. It must come. It has to come. If it does not, we will be trapped in this hell for eternity. So we wait, and we pray, and we work assiduously to bring about that joyful day. Creating his army, one saved soul at a time."

"What you do tonight in His name, you can not know. Every dollar we raise. Every soul we save. Every body we raise up and cleanse in His name is another soldier of god. Amen and Hallelujah."

Christina Black sits back down. Her husband smiles benignly at her as she does so.

What is remarkable, though, is the reaction of the crowd in the room. She's charming, yes. But so fucking insane. This is not the city for that sort of talk. This is not the crowd for that sort of talk, all dressed in black tie and cocktail attire. And yet: and yet, and yet -

- it starts somewhere in the back of the room, a slow drumbeat of applause. Gradually, the other audience members start to stand here and there, until it becomes a sustained standing ovation.

Calden White

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (3, 3, 3, 7, 8, 9, 9) ( success x 4 )

Avery Chase

[willpower]

Dice: 6 d10 TN8 (3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 9) ( success x 2 )

Twilight

Christina believes most of what she says, but there's an undercurrent of falsehood about her. Like she's substituting one system of belief for another. This mild deception, she would herself use other names.

Also: she does NOT believe that her husband showed her the way. That is a total lie.

Calden White

When that woman stood up, Calden was -- a little bored, really. Mildly expectant. When she starts talking, though: oh boy. When she starts talking, he feels his eyebrows wanting to rise. He feels them wanting to crawl all the way to the back of his head. Once or twice, he can't resist a glance around.

She's charming. But so fucking insane. And this is not the city, this is not the crowd, this is not at all the anything for this sort of talk. He can't believe they're not laughing her off the stage. He can't believe they're not shouting, demanding their five hundred a plate back, demanding their charity and their donations and their good faith back, because

she is fucking nuts.

But they're not. No one in this room is angry. Or disbelieving. They're all staring at her, they look rapt, they look like she is the voice of the One True God. Calden looks at his plate. He hasn't touched his food; just moved it around his plate and hid some under a pile of greenery. He looks at Avery, a quick scanning glance. He looks at The Woman again, and that's when she's building to her climax, that's when she's building to the rouse and the rally, and that

is when

Calden feels it too. That undeniable pull; the charisma and magnetism-of-presence that marks leaders and madmen -- and both-at-once. A muscle flexes in his jaw. Amen, sayeth The Woman, and Hallelujah.

Inexorable as a tsunami, the hall swells with applause. People are standing all around. Calden can't see any way out of it. He exchanges a glance with Avery, pushing his chair back, getting to his feet himself. And -- hidden by an avalanche of applause -- he leans over to murmur in her ear.

"Should we get out of here?"

Avery Chase

The world was meant to end. And it must end soon.

Avery has touched her lips to glass but not sipped. She has moved food around on her plate, cut things up, spread them around, almost put food in her mouth but stopped short by asking a question or answering one. She has explained a mild allergy to avoid the soup, laughed softly that she's already tipsy to avoid wine. During the speeches and benedictions she has politely set everything down and aside, nodding to a waiter to go ahead and take her plate of very touched but uneaten food.

She listens attentively, her eyes and ears open, and something about those words strike her hard and deep and painfully. The world is coming to an end. It sorrows her. They, her people, are coming towards their end. They are filled with petty infights, self-loathing, distractions, seemingly insurmountable odds -- yes. The world is filthy, she can agree with that in many ways, and maybe ending it all would wipe the slate clean. Maybe that would help.

It's past the dinner hour. They were all supposed to Go Home a long, long time ago."

Avery blinks her eyes and shakes her head, like someone trying to shake off a ringing in their ear -- though that never works. She blinks repeatedly after that, exhaling, trying to wake up from something. Going home means dying. The world isn't filthy. The world is worth saving. There is no god as these people know it. It doesn't exist, as far as she knows, and if it does, it's a spirit who really got too big for its britches.

But the cadence of Christina's voice abates only for a moment, then the tide pulls Avery back under. The weird religious tone of everything, the fact that they're having a charity function for this cult-like church that is a James-Bond-themed casino night, full of gambling and sex and alcoholism and so forth -- it buzzes at the back of her mind, but does not wake her up completely. She can even sense the falsehood of some of it, the veil over every word out of Mrs. Black's mouth. Something pulls at her from another side: Christina Black, Cara Crenshaw White, it probably means nothing but it's odd and she notices it.

The final battle is coming, or they're all going to be trapped.

A part of Avery wants to crawl into a hole in the earth and let it come.

And then, just moments before applause, certain phrases begin to beat like drumbeats in her ears. Creating his army.

Every body we raise up.

Another soldier.

Calden, seated beside her, sees Avery bow her head and put her fingers to her brow, exhaling as though drained somehow, as though pained or dizzied. She swallows dryly. And from the back of the room, the applause rolls forward, washing over them. She closes her eyes and frowns, deeply, and then something goes through her. A jolt of energy, of conviction, of something. She lowers her hand, places it flat on the tablecloth, and pushes herself to her feet even as the room is giving Christina Black an ovation. Calden is getting to his feet, too, leaning to ask her if they should go, get out. She gives a small, short shake of her head

and waits out the applause.

And waits out the crowd. Even as their applause goes on and on and on and on. Even as finally, finally, they begin to quiet down, settle down, sit down.

Avery remains standing, in those viciously high heels and that glittering, ultramini dress and those sexy eyes and that artfully tousled hair and though she is one of the younger people in this room tonight, there is a moment where by merely holding herself the way she does,

she looks like a queen.

She's looking directly at Christina Black, and all those seated to either side of her like the goddamn Last Supper, with the aura of her moon -- waning in the sky even now -- and her tribe and her rage resting around her like a crown, a cape, a sceptre.

Avery doesn't speak right away. She doesn't need to. Try going into a room and ignoring her. Try seeing her standing there, shining, in a room full of seated sycophants, and pretend you don't notice she's staring you down.

Avery Chase

[-1 WP!]

Twilight

[aaand, stuffs?]

Dice: 6 d10 TN9 (1, 3, 4, 7, 9, 10) ( success x 2 )

Avery Chase

[persuasion: charisma (spec.: charming not applicable) + subterfuge]

Dice: 6 d10 TN7 (1, 1, 2, 5, 7, 8) ( success x 2 )

Avery Chase

[charisma (spec.: charming not applicable) + leadership (spec.: compelling) // diff -1 (successful persuasion)]

Dice: 8 d10 TN5 (1, 4, 5, 5, 8, 8, 8, 9) ( success x 6 )

Twilight

And so: Avery stands. Stands straight up, still and alert and staring at the people on the dais. The Blacks do not notice her presence immediately - after all, everyone else is standing too, applauding and they - particularly Christina - are basking in the applause. She fucking glows with it, as if she were absorbing and feeding on the adoration of the crowd.

Consuming it like a succubus.

If you look closely, she has a small, private, not remotely humble smile on her face.

But the applause begins to die down and people are resuming their seats and the dessert is being brought out so there's this murmur of renewed conversation as the dessert is being served. Calden may notice that... the conversation resumes more or less as it did before. Few people remark on the insanity of the speech, nor though do (many) seem to be parroting her apocalyptic vision of the world, or even remembering the substance of it. Not specifically, not directly.

But then there's Avery, still standing as the people at her table sit down. The others at the tables all around, also sit.

And now the ripple of applause is rippling back to something like normalcy, and the Silver Fang is still standing. The people at the dais do not notice yet but -

- ahh, listen. One of the couples at their table give each other a mildly confused look, then glance covertly at Avery, then stand up and leave. Another couple two tables away peel off after. A handful in the end, maybe 12 to 16 attendees seem to half-wake from their fog and give each other looks and stand up and slip away.

And as this fraction of her audience is being peeled away, Christina Black looks directly at Avery. Narrows her eyes and - smiles, a little jerk of her head toward someone waiting in the wings.

Calden can see Dwayne Richards and another large, tattooed man begin pacing through the crowd intent on their table.

Twilight

Manipulation + intimidation:

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (3, 5, 5, 6, 6, 6, 9, 10) ( success x 5 )

Calden White

Awe is such a small word.

In ages past, the Nation rose and fought and bled and died at the word of the Silver Fangs: Avery's ancestors; Avery's prior incarnations. Even to this day, the Fenrir and the Fianna are still loyalist tribes, by and large. In moments like this, it's not hard to see why. True, they might be the mad kings. But Falcon's children are still the kings of wolfkind.

Calden had stood to go. But Avery does not leave. She does not slink away, or retreat. She stands her ground and she makes sure she is seen doing it. It is not a cunning thing to do. It does not afford her the protection of anonymity, or the upper hand of a future ambush. It is perhaps not even the thing to do if one wishes to remain alive. But it is righteous. It is courageous. And it is -- Calden realizes -- exactly in line with everything he's seen of her thus far.

So he doesn't leave, either. He stands with her. The two of them in a room gone mad with applause: silent and stoic.

The tide washes out. The audience retakes their seats. They don't talk about the speech. They don't gush about it. They don't thrill about it. They may as well have forgotten, which Calden does notice -- but not half so well as he notices those two large men coming their way.

He wants to reach out for Avery's hand. To protect her, or perhaps to share her strength. He can't say which it is himself. Maybe it's both. He doesn't, though. It would see like weakness: lovers linking hands in the face of calamity, and all. He clenches his hand to a fist, and he clasps his hands behind his back.

Stands his ground, too.

Calden White

[will toss a -1WP to stand firm against a 5 succ manip+intim!]

Avery Chase

Two. Four. A dozen. Sixteen. It isn't much, in a room this size. It is enough to be noticable. It is enough to put a dent in Christina Black's dinner for the evening, which does not appear to be prime rib or the vegetarian option, which is a (rather dry) risotto. No, Avery catches that look on Christina's face, and she sees it for what it is. Succubi do not have a monopoly on feeding off the adoration of a crowd. Leadership is a burden and a duty. Basking in adulation for that leadership, however, is an addiction, and one Avery has been trained all her life to watch herself for.

She knows that she made an impact on the woman. Enough to satisfy her. Enough to get two, four, a dozen, sixteen people -- and their money -- away from this madwoman.

Avery can feel Calden standing with her. She did not doubt that he would. She did not think he would sit meekly behind her and stare up at her in awe. She did not think he would slink out like those who, shaken from their stupor, only want to escape. She knows that, even to his own shock and horror, he was willing to save a bullet, accept a saved bullet, if necessary. Whatever else there is between them, he has strength of character, he has integrity, and of course he would stand with her. All the same, she feels a tightness in her chest, a gratitude that saves her from so much of the madness consuming her tribe.

Christina nods to someone; Avery does not take her eyes off the woman. She stares at her, though intimidation is far from her strong suit. She is not trying to intimidate her. Avery knows who has the upper hand here. She can tell: Christina is summoning someone to deal with them. And if Avery were a mortal woman, she would be wary. She might even be afraid. But Avery knows that even if they are not true men, true mortals, she could very likely tear them limb from limb if they laid a hand on her. But she won't. And she wouldn't.

She knows her limits. She knows her weaknesses.

She knows Calden didn't bring a firearm this evening.

In what time she has, Avery speaks.

"I know who your final battle is really against, Christina," she says, her voice leve but pitched to carry, pitched to ring through the room. There's a strange softness to it, a luxurious persuasiveness. A gentleness, a velvet glove over an iron fist. "I know what you're afraid of, out there in the darkness. I've seen it, too."

Maybe the woman up there, maybe certain members of her goon squad, certainly Calden know what she means: I've seen it. I am it.

Her voice lowers, reverbating through what is now near-silence: "It's going to fight back."

She is done talking to Christina Black. She looks towards the men coming her way, a brief and quelling glance, then looks at Calden. She nods at the door, and turns to go.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Block Party [MoHN]


Sam Evans

[nightmares]

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 10) ( success x 1 )

Angelica Cordozo

[Angelica has the Soft-Hearted flaw, just incase it somehow comes into play ]

Twilight

The EAST END AREA REDEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION is holding a daylong block party somewhere off East Colfax. Block party: try two or three blocks worth of party. There are inflatables for the kids, a barbeque eating contest, and a step dancing competition between a few local dance studios and fraternity and sororities and alumni associations.

Some of the booths are set up by local businesses, advertising their services, offering a few freebies, and the like. Most of the booths, though, are manned by local social service agencies, churches, shelters, kitchens, day centers, churches, churches, and churches. Among the most prominent - and the most fun - is an encampment at the far end of the block that takes up nearly half of it. There's a small tent for revival style preaching, and a half-dozen offerings in the tents.

The House of God has a half-dozen organizations under its umbrella. A soup kitchen and thrift store both called In His Name share a large booth. The former is serving free food, slices of cake and non-alcoholic punch and sandwiches, and the latter has racks of thrifted clothing available for $1, $2, or $3 a piece. Balloons stream from the big tent, which is bright in the fading late afternoon, early evening sun.

Another tent in the same complex is more subdued: staffed by a 30-something woman in a neck tattoo and a mismatched business suit and a big, bluff white guy in a too-small suit. rEEntry the sign over the tent says. What they offer (aside from an urn of coffee) isn't clear.

A large, bright white tent showcases a three-dimensional model of something called The Healing Place - which is COMING SOON. There's more cake here, and chips and dip and grapes and cheese and a few more people in suits. Brief perusal of their easels with advertising material suggests that The Healing Place is a drug treatment center in the works, and there's a thermometer showing just how far they've come while seeking funding. Just a few thousand dollars left to go.

Yet another arm: The Citadel has a booth plastered with pictures of African-American and hispanic kids enjoying the usual sort of summer activities at a sleepaway camp. Fishing and hiking and swimming and tubing and playing tug-o-war in the great outdoors.

Mostly, though, the people who throng through the House of God enclave are there for the games and prizes. The Bouncy-House and the Test of Strength, the even the handful of small carnival rides the church sponsored in. A mini-ferris wheel for kids, and a full-sized Spider ride for kids and adults. There are hotdogs on the grill and a general atmosphere of cheer, though a few of the pamphlets from the church proper have titles like THE WAGES OF SIN and SIGNS and LAST DAYS?

Church members are dressed well, if often shabbily. And circulating through the crowd are a handful of young converts dressed in full suit and bow ties, formal enough that locals sometimes mix them up with the Nation of Islam.

Alexis Theron Lambros

[[Cha 2, Empathy 2]]

Sam Evans

[charisma 4: charming, empathy 4: emotional states]

Angelica Cordozo

Block Parties were in Angel's blood, both figuratively and very nearly literally. She'd been to more of these things then she can count, and her parents before her had set up and been apart of their own fair share of such events. Sometimes they used to joke that Angel had been conceived at a block party and born at a protest...neither of which were true...but ahh the stories.

The redevelopment of any area of town was a good thing, new buisness mean't more money, mean't more social programs, and mean't better living conditions for the vast majority of those living in the area. But it wasn't these folks that Angel was on the look out as she walked through the crowd with a bag of cotton candy in one hand, idly snacking away on the bright blue sugary delight. It was all those who would be left behind, those who couldn't afford to move onward and upward, those who were always in need.

These were Angel's people, these were the people she hoped she might help someday, down the road, if fate willed and they wished it.

For now however, their was a party to enjoy. Her steps were light, almost dance like as she moved through the crowd with that bag of cotton candy, the big golden hoops in her ears bouncing as she went. Her hair was pulled back smoothly from her face and she wore a pair of skinny hip hugging jeans and T-shirt with The Villa's logo embroidered on the back, one had to represent after all.

She was moving nowhere in particular...but slowly but surely she was getting closer to the House of God....seemed that god really knew how to throw a party.

Angelica Cordozo

[Angels charisma is a 4, while her empathy is a 3]

Sam Evans

Since Sam's arrival in Denver, she's been busy busy busy. Work has eaten up a lot of her time. Her side projects, too, take up a good bit of her free time. And then there's the exercise, the night or two a week she goes to the gym, the nightly elliptical jaunts in her condo, the once a week boxing lessons. Sometimes she forgets how to breathe.

That's where her coworkers have come in for the rescue the most. They're the ones who told her about the 1Up and the Wynkoop's Thursday night Reddit meets, which to be honest has only been fun sometimes. For once it wasn't Rob who told her were to go for fun, but David her boss, married with a kid, who is actually into things like redevelopment block parties and company picnics and the like. And for once Sam didn't have anything else going on tonight. So she made sure Winslow had water and the balcony door was securely closed and the blinds shut against the sometimes unnecessarily watchful gaze of Cold Crescent's tower, got herself cleaned up after work, and headed out.

"Cleaned up" for Sam is relative, of course. The bantam city kin wears a faded red shirt that reads the Runaways CHERIE CURRIE (a reproduction of course) over tight jeans with large tears at the knees and smaller slashes all up the tops of her thighs, and boots that go to about her mid-calf and are black with too many buckles. Her long hair has been braided loosely around her face, showing off the many piercings that take up a significant chunk of real estate along her ears. Her eyes are smoky shadowed and thick lined, but it's Denver and despite the heat there's no humidity to make it all run and melt off her face.

Clearly, she does not belong among the church tents.

So she keeps to the other areas for the most part, checking out a booth for a shelter before wandering down a little further toward social services. She has procured a hot dog from somewhere, contained in a shallow paper bowl and covered in sauerkraut and chili. She chews a bite thoughtfully as she peruses someone's table full of pamphlets.

Alexis Theron Lambros

Alexis can often be seen at situations similar to this. The work he does at women's shelters (teaching self-defense classes mostly, but also volunteering in other capacities from outreach programs to grunt work) almost ensures that he's aware of most of these events and he tries to make them whenever he can. It helps that his job at the martial arts center is one where he can be a bit flexible in his schedule if he needs to be. The amount of goodwill he engenders benefits the center financially when people come to sign up for classes, so he gets some leeway.

That brings us to now, of course. Alex isn't working this one; he doesn't have any association with this religious group obviously, and not having looked into themthem yet he didn't volunteer. You don't do charity without knowing who's higher up the chain of command...or at least, Alex doesn't. So he's here for moral support only, making his way through the event with a relaxed walk. He's friendly, nodding and waving to anyone he might recognize from his own ventures and pausing to look at the church's propaganda. His brow furrows at them, but no more than those brows might for any other religious talk. End of the world, wages of sin...he's heard it all before.

He has his own family religion, and he knows how close the churches are to the truth of the matter. And how far off.

He's dressed comfortable for warm weather in a light T-Shirt advertising his dojo (at the insistance of the owner), jeans and comfortable running shows. He's got sunglasses on to shield his clear blue eyes from the sun. He pauses as he sees someone out of the corner of his eye, someone he caguely recognizes and not from his self-defense classes. He's seen Angelica somewhere before, in a Nation-related capacity. He smiles and splits from the teenager he was chatting with and turns to head in her direction, waving.

Sam Evans

Sam looks up and smiles and charm and goodness and light to the people manning that particular booth. It's as she turns away and looks around, scouting out the next booth she intends to grace with her presence that she sees Alexis' head moving through the crowd. Not Angelica, though, not yet. The two women are each too short to be seen unless the crowd parts for them just right, and it just doesn't do that yet.

But Sam sees Alexis, who she recalls seeing somewhere sept related. Lost in the crowd of the Solstice gathering, probably. She changes direction and ambles over thataway, taking another bite of her food as she goes. He looks like he's headed somewhere on purpose, but that doesn't even give Sam pause. They're kin or something, related through the distant threads of their shifting families. She has to say hello.

Angelica Cordozo

Alex made his way through the crowd towards Angel, and for a moment he might think he'd lost her in the crowd, that bobbing pony tail fo brown hair disappearing within the wall of humanity that rose up ever so suddenly. But in the next she is there, her own hand up and waving back, her pale blue eyes sparkling in the street light as she smiled and pressed her way towards him.

When she reached him a light welcoming laugh left her lips as she spoke, pleased to see the man. "Alex, so good to see you, how are you chico?" She asks with delight before pointing at him with a far to amused look on her face. "You know the ladies want you back Mr.. They've practically been begging me to sign you up for another course." She says tilting her head as she nodded.

"Seems you do good work." Her smile was enthusiastic broad, the sort of smile that drew you in and made you smile right back. It was over Alexis shoulder, or more likely around his shoulder given to the man's height in comparison to Angelica's that she spots Sam heading in their direction. She offers the woman that same energetic smile and a wave of her cotton candy bag, waving the fellow kinswoman into the group.

Alexis Theron Lambros

Alexis has pretty good situational awareness; despite what a Fenrir and a Bone Gnawer could attest to from a couple weeks earlier, he's normally pretty good at seeing the whole situation around himself and assessing things. So he notes that there's someone coming toward him from another direction as he strides in Angel's direction, and his head turns toward that individual on an intercept course.

When he sees that its Sam, he smiles and nods. He recognizes her as well, from the Solstice gathering if he recalls. It was something like that. He tilts his head, as if to say "this way," in the direction he was travelling. Three kinfolk show up at once place of their own accord without it being planned...that's not the kind of fate that you ignore.

Angel greets him, and he returns the greeting with a frindly smile. "Hey you. Funny to see you here." It's said with a good-natured humor...of course she would be. He takes the compliment in stride. "I've been trying to get back out there, I've just been busy. You know how it is. Glad to hear I've made a good imporession.

Angel waves to Sam...so good, they all know of each other at least. He looks over his shoulder at Sam as she comes up. "So, what do you think of these guys? I don't know a lot about them..." He gestures vaguely toward the tents and other places where the church people are. The question is said mostly to Angel, but only because you don't introduce yourself with a question. Or he doesn't.

Sam Evans

Sam has seen these two around, but she hasn't actually spoken to either of them until now. Alex sees her, recognizes her, gives her that Come along, Pond look, so she finishes off her dog. Its paper container finds a home in the closest trash bin, and as she wipes her hands off on her thighs she kicks up the pace.

"Hey," she greets, but before she can introduce herself Alex is asking a question.

"I hadn't even heard of them before today, but honestly, I'm not much of a churchgoer. I'm Sam, by the way." Leaning a little to her right, her foot slides out after and she maneuvers herself to a more optimal position for conversation with a view of the larger tents.

Twilight

There are always disturbances in crowds like this. Especially in crowds like this. The booths here aren't just offering homemade versions of carnival games or face painting. They're offering cholesterol and STD screenings and family planning and pushing, always pushing, against the avalanche of despair that is life for the poorest of the poor.

Right now, over at the Harmony House booth, a schizophrenic homeless man whose body odor wafts through the crowd like a bleak and wretched flag is speaking louder and louder and louder to himself. Stands just outside the booth, holding a giant paper shopping bag stuffed with even more lumpen arrays of plastic shopping bags and apparently nothing else becoming more and more agitated, while one of the young AmeriCorps volunteers tries to talk him down.

Up ahead, half-way down the block, near the House of God encampment: more raised voices. Alexis is tall enough that if he looks upward he can see the convergance of a pair of suited church members usher-walking a tall young African American girl with puff-ball pigtails bodily / physically out of the half-block or so claimed by the House of God and its affiliates.

--

Closer to home, and harder to spot because he is smaller than even the tiny kinwomen here tonight: a five year old wandering alone through the crowd. He's African-American, with close cropped brown hair and big brown eyes, wearing a t-shirt with Elmo on it and jeans and his eyes are shining but he's not not not crying. Not crying at all. Just holding his chest up and out and looking around the crowd with the bewildered intensity of a lost child. All those legs and arms, all those limbs. All those -

- Sam. No one's really seeing him because he's lost but there's this point where a decision is being made and he walks right up to Sam and tugs on the tail of her t-shirt.

This tug-tug-tug behind her.

Tug-tug-tug.

Tug-tug-tug.

Angelica Cordozo

Angel plucked a small portion of the bright blue cotton candy and stuck it in her mouth and sucking it off her finger. She watched as Sam stepped up and nodded her welcome. "Hey, you were at the Solstice thing right? I'm Angelica." She offered freely, it was the sort of environment you did that, and even if it wasnt..well it was Angel.

Her gaze slips back towards Alexis as he asks about the various programs and tents, about the house in particular and she looked about pointedly before shrugging and leaning in gently to talk in a slightly less outdoor voice. "They do good work, I can't argue that." She gestures discreetly towards the House of God and moved her hand as she spoke.

"They were just a little soup kitchen and shelter less then three years ago, and then boom!" She makes an exploding motion with her hands, her cheeks puffing up slightly as she did. "They started growing, funny thing though...far as i know? They've never gotten any kinda government funding." Her hand moved on to rEEentry and Citadel.

"Both are about rehabilitation, the one working with ex-cons and the other troubled teens and students..." She seemed to trail off in that moment, as the child starts to tug on Sam's T-shirt and she looks to the young kinswoman, and then back to the child.

Sam Evans

"That's-" Sam starts to say weird. She of all people knows a thing or two about companies booming, and the sorts of places that do good on the outside while harboring darker things in their hearts. It's where she came from, well, where she comes from most recently.

She starts to speak but stops at that first tug-tug-tug on her shirt. Sam twists around to look down first. Then she lifts her chin and does a quick scan of the area, looking for a concerned parent or freaking out babysitter or guardian or whomever.

Tug-tug-tug.

She turns around the rest of the way and immediately drops down to one knee, shifting her messenger bag back from her left hip. It's instinctive, that lower of herself to the child's level. Even someone of Sam's diminutive height is sort of giant-esque to a five-year-old.

"Hey, buddy, what's up?" she asks, checking him over with a glance for signs of stress or distress.

[empathy (emotional states)]

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 5, 5, 5, 6, 6, 10, 10, 10, 10) ( success x 6 ) Re-rolls: 4

Twilight

He's very clearly upset. Tears in his eyes and he's trying not to let them fall. He's scared and lost and he's looking for someone and he can't find them because the space is so full of adults and Sam was the nicest looking one within eyeshot but he doesn't trust her and he doesn't want to talk he's not supposed to talk to strangers but everyone's a stranger right now.

Twilight

Sam turns around and looks down and Angelica too and suddenly the boy who was invisible is being seen by TWO people and maybe THREE people and whatever it cost him to approach a stranger is costing him more when more and more strangers are looking at him and he reaches up to shove the back of his hand beneath his nose and there's a little bit of snot that comes away on the back of his hand, all stringy and he gives them both another sulky, swinging look, steeling himself to say something, something -

"Can't find Shanae."

- is what he says, when he finally speaks, and his puffs his chest up before saying it like he's got great big lungs in there and but it comes out quiet and scared with just a bit of bravado.

--

Half a block away, the tall girl being ejected - physically ejected - jerks her arms and pulls herself away from the folks in suits. Shouts something at them, inaudible over the distance and crowd. The larger of the two - a big, bulky white guy with prison tattoos whose biceps are too big for the suit lurches forward like he's going to smear her face on the sidewalk, but a woman puts her hand on his arm and holds him back. If Alex is looking that direction, he can see it all play out like a silent movie.

The girl stiffens, looking back at the two of them, then shakes her head all angry before her anger is chilled, is distilled into something else. Still and panicked.

She turns around and wants to head back into the Church tents but the man and woman are still standing there eying her so she turns around and plunges forward through the crowd. Clearly, frantically looking for something or someone now.

Alexis Theron Lambros

"I'm Alexis." He smiles to Sam and extends a hand in greeting. "Nice to finally meet you. Officially, that is." His handshake is firm without having any sense of machismo to it; there's no Type-A obsession of showing dominance. The reasons are probably obvious.

Angel explains that the House of God people have blown up over the last few years, and Alexis looks surprised and impressed. They both know how rare it is for someone to do that, especially without subsidies. "Really? Wow..." He looks around the event again, viewing it with new eyes. That alone isn't enough to raise red flags...it's odd, but conceivably possible. "Interesting..."

And then there's a frown on his face. It isn't for the disturbances...Alexis expects those at any large gathering, especially one such as this. Rather, he zeroes in on the African-American woman being escorted away. He frowns, deeply. Had there been resistance, his fellow kin would have gotten barely more than a "Be right back" before he was racing over to intervene. As it stands...he's not happy. It's genetically bred into him not to be.

He looks down at the kid, at Sam and Angel. "Something's going on. I'll be right back."

Hey, it was more words than "Be right back," at least. He starts walking quickly toward the situation. The guy who looked like he was about to take a swing is getting what appears to be a death glare. But he's holding back, because no punches were swung yet. There's no mistake on where he's headed though.

"Hey! Everything okay here?" The words are shouted, and they're directed toward the woman. Not the suits.

Angelica Cordozo

Alex tells them he'll be right back, and Angel looks up at him briefly to nod her acknowledgement of his intent. She looks in the direction he heads, but of course she can't see whats going on. Instead she turns her attention back to Sam and the child.

She offers the child a reassuring smile and kneels down next to Sam, looking at her briefly, both surprised and incredibly happy to see that her fellow kinswoman knew exactly what to do in this situation. She lets Sam sooth the child and when an opening is given she flashes the child another reassuring smile as she held out her cotton candy.

"Your gonna be ok little man, here...have some cotton candy, and tell us where you last saw Shanae."

Alexis Theron Lambros

[[Strength+Intimidation]]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (4, 5, 7, 8, 9) ( success x 4 ) [WP]

Sam Evans

He's scared. Sam's mouth quirks but she doesn't even think about reaching out and gathering him up in her arms. It's not something she would do to a fully grown adult, and it's definitely not something she would do to a small child. Never mind that in this day and age touching children with whom one has no connection (and sometimes even then) is a huge no no, don't do that, never ever ever.

Child Psych was a thing Sam studied back in the day, but though her degree wound up being more general. Her specialty with children comes from having only about a dozen younger siblings (three, actually, but they were a handful so it always felt like more) and defaulting to Eldest when the Eldest ran away. She tilts her head and quirks her mouth. Despite the clothes and the make-up and accessories like a spike, black and curving through her right lobe, she is genuinely pleasant in demeanor. Kind and gentle and surprisingly tough. Though she doesn't gather the boy up in her arms, she is scarcely any different than she was the night she gathered a tall, spinly Spiral cub close. That night she soothed and calmed and stroked the girl's hair while silently bidding her farewells to her family all the way across the country, certain that Death himself had stopped that van, if not The Death then at least Her Death.

The point is, Sam is a good person, and her goodness is genuine, and right now it's radiating from the punk-woman in almost palpable soothing waves.

Tilting her head up she looks at Alex and nods silently. She looks at Angel and there's a ripple of displeasure. Offering candy? To a small lost child? Mentally, she shrugs it off.

"We can help you find her, if you like?" she asks, holding out her hand toward him, not caring about the little bit of snot if he takes her hand.

Twilight

The two people in suits: a young(ish) woman with dark hair and blue eyes and the big white guy are both watching Alexis as he runs half-way down the block and shoots that death-glare at the big white guy. There's a ratcheting up of tension in the big dude, a stark, forward curl of his shoulders, enough that the woman inserts herself physically in front of him and talks him down. The big guy says something angrily to the woman, inaudible otherwise, and then turns around and jerks himself away from her, relieved to have an excuse to turn away, and shamed that he feels anything like relief.

The woman though; she looks back at Alexis as the two of them are walking back to the rEEntry tent. Gives him this sweeping survey, up and down and down and up.

Like she's memorizing the shape of his silhouette against the crowd.

The girl turns in a sweep as Alexis asks her if there's something wrong and she gives him this quick, hard look that sweeps back to the pair of suits retreating through the crowd. It's just a gut reaction to trust him; but it seems that deathglare was enough. She grimaces, " - lost my brother when I was - "

Cutting a look back at the church tents. She's younger than she looks. Fourteen or fifteen. Just her height makes her seem older, that and her angry self-possession. Which feels justified, radiant, rightous.

"You seen a little boy? Five year old?"

--

Meanwhile, the boy glances from Sam to Angelica and back again. Reaches out to the one for the cotton candy and pulls away a big, shearing handful that starts to melt as soon as it hits the warmth of his hand, and reaches out the other to Sam, then frowns and reconsiders, then does it anyway.

"Not supposed to talk to strangers."

The kid says.Not supposed to take candy from strangers either but that one's pretty hard to resist.

He starts stuffing the long hunk of melting sugar into his mouth, still sniffling, a bubble of snot expanding and breaking on his upper lip as he considers them.

"By the Ferris wheel." - is what he tells Angelica. "We was in line but then she went."

Alexis Theron Lambros

Despite current appearances, Alexis is not a man who provokes situations as a rule. He's certainly not a guy to keep them heated past when they need to be, and so there's no parting words like "Yeah, you BETTER run!" or mocking looks sent toward the guy in the suit. Alexis doesn't hold the man the enough regard to give him a moment's more attention than he requires, although he absolutely files that face away in his mind. Under a category that is labelled in a way he would never speak. He doesn't like profanity most of the time.

Besides, he has more important things to worry about...namely, the woman in front of him. As we were told earlier, Alex has some fairly good situational awareness and he caught the conversation between the boy Sam found and the kinfolk herself. Angry and dangerous Alexis bleeds away to leave friendly, concerned Alexis behind for the woman and he nods a little bit.

"Are you Shanae?" He definitely caught that part. "I'm Alex. I think he found my friends and I."

He steps back so as to give her some room. "C'mon. If it's not him, then we can regroup and go looking for him. Four heads are better than two, you know?"

If she seems willing, he'll turn and start leading her back to the others, gently clearing a path so she can get there.

Sam Evans

Her brows lift at the momentary indecision, but the looks melts into a warm and glowing smile when he takes her hand.

"Good, you shouldn't talk to strangers. Name's Sam. I live down the street." Down the street meaning much, much closer to downtown, but still. "This is Angelica. If you tell us your name we won't be strangers anymore." The hand she offered was her right, which leaves her left still free to reach into her bag for the little travel packet of tissues she keeps in there among many other things. She rips one out and holds it out to the boy. If he takes it, fine, if he doesn't it goes into her pocket. Either way, she lifts up onto the balls of her feet and cranes her head around, looking for the ferris wheel.

That's when she notices Alexis parting the crowd like Moses. She lifts her free arm and waves.

Angelica Cordozo

The young man takes the cotton candy and starts to stuff it into his mouth. This action makes Angel's smile broaden, a moment of trust between strangers, a chance to help....it was what she lived for. Sam's displeasure is noted, but it is left alone, there were obviously bigger things to worry about, like the well being of the child who stood there, one hand covered in sugar and the other in Sams.

She rose then, also looking about for the Ferris Wheel, both her and Sam craning around like meerkats in search of danger. When they pick it out Angel knelt back down and spoke to the boy.

"What's your sister wearing little man." She asked as she rested her hands on her knees. "She wearin anything special, anything you could easily pick out at a distance?"

Of course...little does Angel know....the childs sister is closer then they imagined.

Twilight

The girl goes still when Alexis says her name, nods warily and then breathes out sharply when he introduces himself and tells her I think he found my friends and I and she's already willing, moving. Frantic and edgy and alert.

"Damn, thank god - " her relief palpable, livid in the evening air. Alexis might be intent on gently clearing a path back through the crowd but Shanae - the girl is long, tall, lean, athletic - wants to fucking run. There's still adrenaline bright in her veins and tears come with the relief and she's right on Alexis' heels and sometimes pushing him forward, " - where are they,"

--

Sam offers the kid a tissue. Five year olds only blow their noses IN your tissue. They don't take them when their hands are full of cotton candy and also stranger-hand. Still, the boy lifts his nose toward her hand when she pulls out that tissue, ready to give her a good blow if she's brave enough to wipe the snot-bubble from his nose.

"Ain't supposed to tell my name." The boy returns, "We don't live real close. We took the bus. Shanae said we could see our moms but they - "

Right about then, Alexis and Shanae charge through and Shanae rushes through and grabs the little boy up in her arms. Just wraps him up and picks him up, nevermind snot and cotton candy which is now melting not only on the boy's hands but right into her puff-ball pigtails. "Antoine, thank god."

Shaking with relief, is she. Absolutely shaking with it. Relief and the afterburn of anger and - all of it. All of it.

"Thank you - " over the boy's shoulder to the rest of them. "Thank you thank you thank you!"

Alexis Theron Lambros

As soon as Shanae indicates that it's her, he understands. He goes as quick as he's able without being rude to the people they're displacing; the last thing they need is to start a fight in the crowd. He knows it's not fast enough for the woman he's escorting to her brother, but he's trying at least.

And then they break through and he fluidly slips to the side so that the siblings can be reunited. He smiles as they do, crossing his arms over his chest. He gives a quick look around; he's not putting it past the security people (he assumes that's what Prison Guy and Associate were) to be looking for an opportunity to eject them even further.

"Don't mention it," he says when Shanae gives the three of them thanks. He looks over to Sam and Angel a moment, giving them both warm smiles, then back around. He's basically standing guard over the reunion at the moment. He has a couple of questions, but they can wait. It's only after the initial burst of relief is warn off a bit for Shanae that he speaks up. "So what was with those two that were hauling you off, anyway?"

Angelica Cordozo

If bridging gaps between strangers and helping those in need was her bread and butter, then a moment like this was Angel's champagne and caviar. When the little boy is swept up in the woman's arms she simply stands with one hand on her hip and a broad smile upon her face. There is something else in that smile however, something like longing, or a memory of something in the past.

"Your welcome Shanae, to do anything less would be a crime." She said looking around at Sam, sharing a pleased look before her gaze found Alexis as he came up after Shanae's explosive entrance. "What can't you do?" Her tone amused, but also impressed before the smile faltered some and she looked back towards Shanae and Antoine, considering the words the young child spoke moments before being swept up.

"Shanae, If you like I can get you a ride home, I bet sticking around after this isn't really in the cards right?" She asks, her voice tentative, as if she were trying to feel something out.

Twilight

"Shit." Still with her arms around the kid, shaking her head and giving a sharp look back through the crowd toward the church encampment. Then she looks back at Alexis. "They won't let me see my moms. She's done been in there for I don't even know how long. Supposed to be a month and she come out with a job and clean and I don't even know how long it's been and when you go down there to they office they don't even let you in.

"Got to buzz you up and they just say you don't got an appointment you got to go."

Then a sharp breath in, glancing back at Angelica. Right hand cradling the back of her brother's head as she looks down at the Bone Gnawer and shakes her head. Maybe a hint of suspicion in her face and manner. "We got bus passes. We'll be alright."

Sam Evans

Sam holds the tissue in place while Antoine blows his nose into it, then wipes away the snot with nary a curl of her lip or a scrunch of her nose. Never mind that she's just exposed herself to about ten billion different illnesses, she's kinfolk. If a corrupted company or weird laser shooting diamonds or Spirals can't take her down, a summer cold doesn't stand a chance.

Then there's Shanae and Sam is left holding a snot-filled tissue for a moment. "Hang on a sec," she says, to Angelica. She's not about to interrupt that reunion, not by a long shot, but she does want to toss the snotrag. It's when she's looking at Angelica that she sees that smile, and sees perhaps a little more than either she wanted to see or the Gnawer wanted to show. Turning her head away quickly, the rest of her soon follows, and she trots off to the nearest trash can before trotting back.

She returns in time to hear about appointments and buzzings. Frowning a bit, she asks, "What happens when you try getting an appointment?" she asks, assuming that it has of course been tried already, and failed.

Angelica Cordozo

Angel see's that look of mistrust and she puts her hands up casually. "It's cool, cab ride, bus pass, its all the same to me." She wasn't taken aback by the woman's comment, such mistrust was common on the streets, and a gift horse was often thoroughly examined...with dental drills.

"Your talking about the rEEntry program right?" She inquires, looking at Shanae before letting her gaze drift past her to the tent in the distance. "If you like, I can put you in touch with a lawyer Shanae." She offers as her gaze slides back to the woman and her brother. "I can help cover the fee's and maybe she canw ork through the red tape to get you guys in. I knew the program was pretty serious...sounds like its to much though."

Twilight

"They say, she ain't cleared for re-entry yet." Shanae returns to Sam with a grimace over her brother's head. "So we don't have no reason to come down. Then they say, if you wanna come down we kin send you to camp for the summer. Find someone to foster that brother, or do you want us to call CPS and tell 'em you been left there all alone."

An alert look back to Angelica when she offers an appointment with a lawyer, help covering the fees and red tape. The girl's still 14 or 15 but nearly as tall as Alexis, a looming shadow over the two diminutive kin. "I don't know. If CPS comes Antoine and me are gonna go to foster care. We go back we won't never get to see my moms again. They ain't gonna keep us together, neither."

Alexis Theron Lambros

He frowns deeply when Shanae explains what the problem is, his eyes immediately straying--almost involuntarily--to where he the suits went back to. Normally, he wouldn't be as immediately suspicious. It's shady, yes...but there are possible explanations. But his mind combines that with what Angel said, fitting the pieces together like a particularly slippery puzzle.

Blew up into something huge out of nowhere. No government subsidy. Claims to help people in a difficult--even desperate--situation and then those people are cut off from their family. Alexis doesn't have a huge amount of experience with them, but still...he knows a damned cult when he hears it. One with backing from someone powerful.

Powerful and shadowy cult leaders. Yeah, that doesn't make his day.

"A lawyer might be a good idea, yeah." It's said supportively, though he isn't sure that he necessarily believes it. "Don't go to that camp. If you want--and I understand if you're not comfortable with it, 'cause you don't know me--I can look into finding a place for you guys to stay until your mother gets out. Somewhere that CPS won't know to look for you and so these people can't try and sweep you away."

Sam Evans

This is the part where Sam has less knowledge than the other two. Angelica has her community center, Alexis helps at women's shelters. The Glass Walker couldn't even begin to tell those kids where to find places like that in this city without pulling out her phone, and she wouldn't want to just rattle off names. She'd only give the names of places she knew to be reputable. She and Alexis have something in common with that mindset, at least.

What she does, though, is she files away the information. A company that takes mothers away from their children, then tells those children they have no reason to see her? Red flags everywhere, danger danger Will Robinson. She makes a note of that program, that camp, and starts planning out how exactly she'll go about researching them.

If only she had a Laura Mitchell to buy her a burner laptop and drive her out to some other city to jack into some other place's wi-fi. And then she realizes that she's no longer at the bottom rung of a company. She's no longer the assistant at a bakery. She's perfectly capable of doing those things herself.

"I'll help out however I can," she promises without saying exactly what shape that help might take.

Angelica Cordozo

"Then hows this sound. I'll look into them, and I'll see what I can find." Its the best offer she can make. "I'll let you know, and if I can get something arranged for you guys to see your mom's, then I'll let you know?" She pulls out a card for the Villa, with her number already there in the typography.

"Just gimme a call...or don't, whatever your comfortable with right?" She offers that last bit, holding the card out to Shanae for her to take...or not. She would still move forward, she would still investigate.

Something was rotten in that little program....and she intended to find out.

Sam Evans

[percept+alert]

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (3, 6, 6, 7, 8, 10) ( success x 5 )

Angelica Cordozo

[Kin Senses tingling? Per+Alert]

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (2, 2, 6, 7, 7, 9) ( success x 4 )

Twilight

(Hmmm.)

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 9) ( success x 1 )

Alexis Theron Lambros

Per+Alert

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 6, 8, 8) ( success x 3 )

Twilight

Shanae takes Angelica's card, but it is Alexis' offer that really seems to snag her interest. There's a rich vein of living suspicion on her face, but something about demeanor, the way she holds out her hand for a card he may or may not have, says that she's considering, seriously considering his office of a shelter where CPS cannot find them.

He tells her not to go to that camp though and she gives him this sudden grin: all fat chance and do I look fucking stupid to you and bright teenaged bravado. Like hell she was going to that camp, but good advice anyway. On that point, they agree.

If Alexis has a card to offer Shanae tucks it with Angelica's and shifts her brother's weight from one arm to the other one and tucks the cards together and slips them into the back pocket of her jeans. Then shifts the boy's weight again and gives them all a genuine smile.

"Thanks for finding Antoine."

--

She steps past them, pushing through the crowd to find the bus stop.

Meanwhile, each of them, every last one of them, notices, perhaps two dozen feet away: a woman in an ill-fitting business suit, her arms crossed, tattoos visible on her fingers. Watching them.

Just watching them. Her attention cuts to Shanae as the girl slips away through the crowd, and then she too, turns around. Disappears into the block party.