Sunday, November 24, 2013

Susan from Billing


Erich Storm's Teeth

It is well after business hours, so at least there's that. Still doubtlessly there are people Working Late in Eva's law offices despite that it is 1) Saturday and 2) Saturday night. So perhaps the young savage emerging from the emergency stairwell from somewhere above-stairs still manages to draw a glance or two as he makes his way through the halls, past the partners' offices with their nice oaken doors and nice mahogany furniture, past the cubicle farm where the lessers sit, all the way to the tiny little mecca of the kitchen.

There is a Keurig machine there, and lots of those little K-cup packs tucked up in the cupboard above. Erich has long since discovered the stash. He pops a nice Tully's French Roast in, then raids the fridge for pastries. Maybe they have apple turnovers. Or if not, maybe he can at least make himself a PB&J.

Éva Illésházy

This time of year there are always pastries. A constant supply of them baked by the staff or brought in by clients or vendors as holiday gifts. Never forget the breadbox full of bagels and the tiny little packets of peanut butter in individual containers, the sort one usually finds on the breakfast buffets in medium-rate hotels, the sort with a waffle machine and a tiny fridge full of tiny yogurt containers and the saddest selection of Red Delicious apples you'll see this side of Wal-Mart.

There is also - somewhere in that fridge - a tuna sandwich named Kevin.

The door to the kitchen opens behind Erich while the Keurig is still warming up. It drifts off to sleep when left unattended over the weekend, so he has an extra minute or two to spend perusing the contents of the fridge before it is time to pop in the Tully's.

"You've made yourself at home." A woman's voice, mildly ironic but without asperity. "I trust you've found everything you require?"

Lola Hawkes

This time of night Lola would typically be back around The Homestead by now, bringing in a final armful of wood for the furnace or trying to teach Hector to speak Spanish while he, in return, tried to teach her how to pluck chords out on a guitar. She'd been in the city visiting her cousin, though, sharing a cup of something warm while she forced information about the Nation and their current events down the reluctant relative's throat. As she was driving back home a thought occurred to her, a snap decision was made, and the rusted 1980-something truck ventured to the heart of the city rather than making its way to the freeway.

Some twenty minutes later, Lola had convinced the front security man (thankfully a Kinfolk) to let her in even though she didn't have a key card to badge her way through the doors. Somehow, she'd also gotten him to help her check the cameras and figure out approximately Erich had been most recently, as the Uktena was hunting for him specifically and was unwilling to go trolling an entire skyscraper looking for him.

The Kinsman assisted by checking cameras with a reluctant frown on his face, but was able to pinpoint a broad-shouldered blond-headed figure cutting across a screen in the last ten minutes and directed Lola which floor to go to. She thanked him gruffly (although there was nothing personal about it) and was on her way.

This is how she ends up making her way through the entrance of the law firm that Eva worked at, looking some mix between cautious and very self assured, but clearly unprepared for how large the office that she'd stepped into was. Desks, workspaces, offices, computers.... It seemed a maze to her. So, slow and with a frown etched into her face, Lola's hands went into the pockets of her open coat and she started to stalk along the perimeter of the office with half the lights turned off that she'd found her way into, not saying a word and hunting with her eyes and ears instead.

Erich Storm's Teeth

Erich yelps.

He not only yelps, he fumbles with the two K-cups he has in hand, because obviously he's decided to brew himself not one but two cups of Eva's firm's coffee. Also he has a little paper plate stacked with two apple turnovers, a lemon bar, and two brownie bites.

So yes. He's made himself at home. And found everything requires. Once the fumbling is under control and the K-cups are picked up off the floor, he turns to Eva.

"You scared the crap out of me! I thought Susan from Billing, who said she was going to call security next time she saw me stealing food. I mean, sharing food."

Erich Storm's Teeth

[I FORGOT ERICH ONLY EATS MEAT. his plate is actually stacked with those hillshire farm sausages and stuff.]

Erich Storm's Teeth

[fuck my life. i meant HICKORY farms.]

Éva Illésházy

"Susan from Billing has no reason to be here after dark on a Saturday night. I'm sure she has a date with a Lifetime Original Movie and a bowl of popcorn tonight, and has to be up early for mass in the morning."

The kinswoman's attire is decidedly more evening than weekend tonight. She wears a bodyskimming little black dress with a cashmere wrap thrown over her bare arms against the office chill. The deep, blooded red of Mozambique garnets at her ears and her throat. She's barefoot, though.

Must have kicked off her somewhere in her office.

"I will make you a deal, though. If you confine your commissary raids to the opposite of ordinary work hours, I will endeavour to ensure that whatever you require is available, when you require it.

"And, Erich?" The brief, dark grace of her eyes on his profile. The slicing edge of an incipient - something. Call it a smile. "You're a Shadow Lord. I refuse to believe that I frightened you."

Lola Hawkes

Somewhere past a few rows of flimsy temporary walls and desks lined with drab pictures of marriages and children and pets, voices start to leak their way into the hallway. Lola's steps aren't loud, she's wearing simple soft-soled white sneakers instead of heavy boots today. Boots are best for hiking, for traversing the terrain, but on pavement and sidewalks and tiled floors sneakers were just the better option all around.

Eva's expressing that she doesn't believe she frightened Erich when Lola wraps her way around into the open doorway of the kitchenette. She has no business being here, and it would be no doubt startling for either of the Shadow Lords to see the vaugely familiar face there. All the same, Lola stands in the doorway like she has every right to be there, one hand on the door frame and the other resting in the pocket of the simple open black jacket that she was wearing. Under that she had a white T-shirt with a screenprint image of something colorful or another on the front of it, and the shirt was tucked into the high waistband of a navy blue cotton skirt that she wore, which was stitched in a way to flow out from the body without being drastic, and the hem stopped at the middle of her shins.

Jeans weren't cutting it for her these days-- she only had one pair left that would button up in any comfortable way, and even then leaning or bending while wearing them was uncomfortable. Her dense mass of black hair was in a knot at the nape of her neck, and her cheeks and nose were still just a touch reddened from the cool outside.

Her expression was only the tiniest bit surprised-- for some reason she hadn't quite expected to see Eva there. But all the same, she jerks her chin up in greeting to the both of them.

"Evenin'."

Erich Storm's Teeth

"Yeah well," Erich looks a little uncomfortable, "I guess I'm not a very good Shadow Lord. Anyway, you didn't scare me. The apparition of Susan from Billing scared me." He scans her for a beat, and then his brain-mouth filter fails again: "Why are you dressed like that, anyway? Or well. Why are you here, dressed like that?"

Lola appears. If she looks surprised, Erich looks doubly so. Then Erich looks sort of disgruntled.

"Hi," he says, a little stiffly.

Éva Illésházy

"I'm here because Congressman Wildborn's nephew was arrested for DUI and possession with intent to distribute and I intend to have him out before sunrise."

A quiet huff.

"I'm dressed like this - "

Whatever she was going to say (she is a Shadow Lord, she was going to say nothing) is forestalled, as Lola appears in the dark offices, in the hall outside the kitchen. The floor is virtually empty at this hour, though a few industrious, foolhardy, or masochistic associates are no doubt holed up in their offices. Those with a hope of reaching 2000 billable hours for the year, anyway. The rest have given up.

A brief, winging look from Erich to Lola, and back again. Her finely arched brows rise in an elegant curl of query.

"Good evening. May I help you?"

Lola Hawkes

[[ Sorry about that! Man got home and had to check some stuff. Typing now! ]]

Lola Hawkes

Lola had clearly surprised the pair of them, although for one the expression of surprise is clear and for the other it's more felt, assumed, figured than anything else. Erich's greeting was stiff, naturally, and Eva asked if she needed some sort of help from her. Lola's dark eyes cast from Kinfolk to Garou. She didn't smile to either of them, but greeted the pair of them none the less.

First, to Eva: "No, thanks though. I'm here huntin' for him--" She nodded her head toward Erich when she said this, then continued-- "though I wasn't sure if you ever heard 'bout what happened with that Nina gal or not?

Second, to Erich: "Ya got a minute?"

Erich Storm's Teeth

"I hope his uncle's paying you really well for coming to save his ass instead of enjoying whatever it is you dressed up for."

He glances at Lola again. And, heart-on-sleeve creature that he is, he frowns again. At least he doesn't yell NO and run off somewhere, though. He just gathers up his yummies and his coffee.

"Whatever you wanna say to me, you can say in front of my tribeswoman." Well isn't he just the Thunder loyalist tonight. "Let's go back upstairs, though. C'mon, if we take the stairs it's quicker than walking all the way to the elevators and waiting."

Milton Kegler

"No need to get up!" He says passing security. "I got this!" In this world there are doers, and there are... Not doers! Milton is one of the first, and in this case what he was DOING was walking and he sure as fuck didn't need some security guard telling him how to walk! This was his life and he would live it his way without the man telling him how to live it!

Soon enough he was onto the elevator and headed up, up, up to... Well, see who might be around. Someone's around right? This place wasn't exactly the kinda place you could abandon, not with the great white tentacle living far below them! Nope, this place was an active threat that required a garou presence so... Milton figured he'd find an army in the section set away for the garou. However, there was a hint of surprise on his face when he found the place empty.

"Uhm... Hello?" He calls out softly as he steps off the elevator and begins wandering around. Clearly this was not a Glasswalker operation, shit would have been handled, organized, and there would be teams up here even now planning the next set of steps for the folks in this city. Hmm... Children of Gaia are running the show maybe? It's hard to say, but Milton wasn't gonna give up that easy, there had to be someone around here tonight!

Éva Illésházy

"His uncle is not paying me overmuch." Erich's tribeswoman replies, her voice low and quite nearly instructive. Cool, assuredly, quite as cool as her glance when Lola allows that she has found her way into the offices of Éva's law firm because she was looking for Erich.

A glance then, at the Ahroun's profile, as he frowns so openly, a plate of smoked sausages and a double-mug of Keurig coffee in hand.

"But he will owe me."

Some things, after all, are more valuable than money.

Family. One's good name.

Favors, assuredly.

"The back stairwell is around the corner."

That instruction is for Lola. Éva's reasons for accompanying the duo are her own, but accompany them she does: out the door of the kitchen, to the back stairs, echoing and industrial. And up and up and up.

Lola Hawkes

Erich explains that anything Lola needs to say to him can be said in front of Eva, and that they should head upstairs. Lola glanced to the plate of smoked and dried meats and the two cups of coffee that Erich was managing to balance and raised one expressive eyebrow just a little, but her attention was pulled away by the older Kinswoman who explained they could use the back stairwell that was that-a-way, around the corner.

Lola shrugged one shoulder and stepped back out of the doorway, and would wait for the pair to pass before bringing up the rear and following to the stairwell.

She doesn't wait to start talking. Apparently she was completely comfortable with having her conversation with Eva around. If there was one thing that Lola was unfamiliar with (up until very recent events, at least), it was a solid sense of shame.

"I was gonna wait 'till the moon was thinner, but I was in town already," she begins explaining, and catches the door from whoever passed before her when they enter into the stairwell and start making their way upstairs. "I owe you an apology, man. I shouldn't have pushed ya like I did."

Erich Storm's Teeth

Well, color Erich surprised. Not so surprised that he drops his coffee and sausage plate down the stairs, but -- surprised enough that, marching up ahead of the kinswomen, he turns and kind of just ... looks surprisedly at Lola.

"Wow." He sounds genuinely impressed. And maybe Eva, who thinks in terms of what people owe her and what those favors could amount to in the future, also thinks Erich is totally wasting a chance to hold this over Lola for some future gain, but -- "That was pretty cool how you just owned that. I respect the guts that took.

"And well. I'm pretty sure I had a part in escalating that too. Like I'm pretty sure I jumped down your throat a couple times. So. I'm sorry I didn't even try to make peace or anything."

Éva Illésházy

They walk that brief stretch of hall to the stairwell. Éva opens the door, Lola is bringing up the rear. But before the security door snaps closed behind them, the eerie, almost rather angular sound of a phone ringing in a silent office. Just the rush of forced air from the furnace, the hum of the electronics. The whirr of some machinery, somewhere far away.

Still, that ring. Éva snaps her head up, pauses on the rough, concrete stairs, a narrow frown knit between her brows.

"It sounds like the two of you can work this out own your own." Mildly spoken, all told. "If you'll excuse me, I do have to get that. Good night."

Lola Hawkes

Lola had just let go of the door to let it smack closed behind her when Eva declared that she needed to go get the ringing door. Erich was already partway up the first half-flight of stairs. So, the Uktena snatched the door by its handle and held it back open for Eva, and waited until the woman had passed through before letting it close again. She provided Eva with an off-handed kind of: "Goodnight, then," before the heavy security door thwacked back into place in its frame and the pair born under the Full Moon were left to ascend the staircase as a duo instead.

Erich was clearly surprised by what Lola had to say. Perhaps he thought she was seeking round two, or that she was going to try and better define the ground that she was trying to stand on when they'd gotten into their argument a week ago. He says that the's impressed with her and apologizes as well. Lola just looked up at him evenly, but didn't offer any smiles.

Rather, she began that climb up the staircase and nodded her head to urge him to come along as well, though he was probably starting the journey himself already. "Ain't your place to be making peace," she said dismissively. She kept close to the right and let her hand trail along the railing to help along the way up. Lola was a solid creature, built to last and weather the worst of storms, but her body was forever exhausted these days and after three flights she's slowed, is taking her time with her steps, but refuses to pant or break a sweat. She was a proud thing, after all.

She'll be waiting for his guidance as to which floor they're stopping at, and so stays a few steps behind him.

"I don't think we're gonna agree on what we were fighting about, so I ain't even gonna try with that subject again. But... I know what your Kinswoman was gonna say before I... 'eh... left. Wanna set that straight, at least. That I don't hide behind bein' a Kinfolk, and that wasn't what I was tryin' ta say." That thread of pride gleams bright, and there's a disgruntled edge to her words. "But I figure that's a conversation for her and not you."

It seems Lola had a number of full and pseudo apologies to make following her actions last weekend.

Milton Kegler

Milton was seated in the hallway at this point, with a smile on his face as he wandered around the building's internal security system curiously on his iPad. How the iPad was interfacing with the local security system would be anyone's guess, but Milton seemed to be having a blast peeking around and seeing what this building had in the way of defenses. It was surprisingly easy for the new moon to lose all interest in what he was doing and find himself sucked into something else.

Erich Storm's Teeth

"Night, Eva," Erich calls after the departing kinswoman who is, he supposes, sort of his ward. Or something. Weird thinking about her like that. Weird and somewhat ill-fitting, especially since Erich is fairly sure Eva has more money, connections, resources and wiles than he ever will. So it's not like she exactly needs to be looked after. "You should come visit upstairs sometime. I mean, you were half the reason our showdown with the Beloved Horror was even the semi-success it was. So. Yeah."

Then she's gone, and it's just him and Lola. And they're trudging up the stairs, and after three flights Erich is obliged to stop because Lola was clearly winded. "Just four more," he assures her, which might not be all that assuring because four more ffs.

"Melantha's not my kinswoman," he adds, almost reflexively. "She's my packmate, but she doesn't belong to anyone but herself. Anyway, yeah. I didn't think you were hiding behind being a kinfolk. At all. I mean I sort of thought you maybe ... should a little more almost? 'Cause dude, challenging full-moons to throw down on a full moon is gonna get you beat up or killed someday. 'Cause some of us have totems that tell us we can't refuse a challenge, you know? Plus, tempers."

He starts climbing again. Four stories. Five. Six. He pauses again:

"Anyway what I'm saying is: I know you weren't hiding behind that. But yeah, that's probably something you and her should talk out. You guys might actually have some common ground. A lot of differences too though.

"C'mon," he says. "One more flight."

Up at the top, an unremarkable steel door opening into the hallway of the ex-Sept. Erich has been camping out there for a while now, and while he doesn't sleep here often, and doesn't even come here every single day, he's here often enough that his scent lingers in the air. Some of his stuff can be found lying around -- a cellphone here, a bag of chips there -- particularly near what used to be the challenge circle.

They don't get that far, though, before they run into Milton. Who is a stranger to Erich. Which instantly prompts the young Ahroun to call, "Hey! Who are you?"

Éva Illésházy

If Éva understood that Erich thought of her as, sort of, his ward, the look she flashes him before the security door swings shut would be considerably cooler and rather more guarded. Instead, there's a quiet beat of her steady regard, the mild twist of the beginning of an ironic little something that reacts not-at-all to the compliment, so much as the invitation.

"I will."

Is all she says, then. There are no other farewells.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

zeal


zeal

rules!

1. If you guys want to follow a post order, go for it. I only care about everyone posting once for every post I make.

2. The chances of combat occurring are so low I haven't tabulated a "character death" probability but one never knows. Try not to shoot the NPCs and you should make it out with all your health levels.

3. If you have Flaws, hand 'em over.

4. I'm going to make assumptions based on stalking y'all's transcript blogs for setting this up but if you want to supply me with the name(s) of up to 3 Garou (living or recently-deceased) who your character considers "important" I will totally use them against you later.

5. Hold onto your butts, opening post incoming.

Evans

[nightmares, yo]

Dice: 7 d10 TN7 (2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10) ( success x 2 )

zeal

They all got a letter yesterday.

A few of them are not easy to find and their properties afford them enough of a lookout that they could have seen a visitor coming. Others live in secured buildings. Locks between them and the outside world. It doesn't matter. The letters bear no postage and no return address and they do not recognize the handwriting on the outside.

Thin block letters score their names into the centers of the envelopes' faces. The paper inside the envelopes is yellow, legal, without scent. The handwriting on the letter itself is careful with an edge of anger to it. The author pressed hard but did not smear the ink.

Each letter says the same thing, in the first paragraph:

You and I have never met. I know you have no reason to read this, let alone trust me, yet I write to you in the hopes that you are decent and will meet with me anyway.

The rest of the letter is different for each person.

Evans

Sam finds the letter in her mailbox, along with ads and junk mail and bills and such. When she finishes sorting through the stack she picks up the envelope, frowning a little. The Glass Walker isn't entirely married to the idea of electronics, but paper correspondence? In this day and age? When she opens it her frown deepens.

Well. That doesn't really clear up much. Sam Evans has a lot of friends that are a lot of things. So, is this letter calling out hackers? Members of the queer community? Computer engineers? If there is one thing someone might be worried their sister is, it's a computer engineer.

Garou, maybe?

Whatever it is, despite the angry cast of the handwriting, someone is asking for help. If there is one lesson Samantha Evans should have maybe learned in her time in Denver it's to stop answering calls for help. She's seen so much, nearly died a time or two. She also got a kid, though, so.

She fires off a text to Keisha letting her know that something's up, leaves Jake in the care of the nanny (a Bone Gnawer kinsman by the name of Anthony, by the way, a kind man with a Garou cousin not far away just in case of...well, just in case), and heads out to the Wells Fargo Center.

She pulls her aqua blue CX-5 into the lot, but doesn't get out yet. Instead, she hangs back in the driver's seat, checking her bag to make sure she has all of the essentials. Notebook, wallet, taser, mace, 9mm hand gun, check check check check check.

Lola Hawkes

Lola had received a letter yesterday, pinned under the foot of the small wooden table between two rocking chairs on her front porch. She was immediately suspicious, as such is her nature, but after she'd opened the letter and started reading that feeling was justified. By the time she reached the end of the letter, the suspicion was replaced with defensive anger that boiled in her ribs and flushed her face. It was a watered down, impotent rage compared to what her Cousins carried, but it had her crumpling the letter up in her fist and stomping inside of her house none the less.

The next day she arrived at the Wells Fargo Center as the letter had instructed, approximately ten minutes within the seven o' clock hour. She had parked her old and half-rusted metal deathtrap of a white truck in the parking lot, the vehicle rumbling and creaking in protest on its suspension as it moved from street to lot. She found herself a spot that she could fit the dinosaur of a vehicle into, climbed out, and slammed the door shut behind her.

It's seven on the nose when Lola makes her way around to the front of the very tall building. She only looks out of place because she seems to be searching for something-- wandering, anxious, hunting, but unsure of what for exactly. She wore her long black hair down her back and over her shoulders with a white knit cap to keep her head and the tops of her ears warm. Along with that she wore a thick wool-knit cream colored sweater with cuffed sleeves that hugged her wrists, and a thick red down vest overtop of that. Dark jeans and brown riding boots covered her bottom half, and her hands were jammed into the pockets of her vest.

Along with clothes she wore a heavy scowl, and when her breath huffed in white clouds into the air they were almost reminiscent of a bull snorting steam at a red sheet.

She was hunting for whoever this Matador would be.

Alexis Theron Lambros

Alexis Theron Lambros is, as those people who have met him can attest to, a very calm individual. Many people learn martial arts for many reasons; self-defense, athletic outlet, just so they can beat people up and be a badass. Alexis' reasons were firmly for the first two, and he studied the philosophy along with it. He practices elements of that philosophy, and it gives him a bit of a Zen outlook to complement the teachings of the Nation. As such, there isn't much (well, Phoebe knows one thing, but besides that) which can rattle him.

Mention of certain individuals in conjunction with a potential blackmail threat prompts him to leave all that Zen calmness at the door of his apartment. The letter and its envelope are left crumpled on the floor and he's generally been in a bad mood for the whole of the day afterward. He keeps to himself and calls off his classes for the day, and stays at home until the time is right.

The time is now right.

He shows up at the location, pulling his 1984 Buick LeSabre into the parking lot of the building. He's dressed simply enough, in a grey turtleneck and jeans with a windbreaker over the whole thing. He hasn't come armed, because...well, he doesn't believe in guns. He knows how to use one, but he hates them as a rule, and the weapons he knows how to use don't conceal well. So when he slips out of the car, still frowning, he casts his eyes about the place. Alexis generally has good situational awareness, and he's putting that to use now as he scans the lot, starts to move toward the building front.

Éva Illésházy

By seven full dark has fallen and the city is wrapped in that strange balance of shadow and brilliant, artificial light that seems strange and bright and stirring as the days narrow toward the winter solstice.

Listen, there is a nondescript Lexus parked some indeterminate distance from the Wells Fargo Center. It is not close. The woman who drives is is attractive but not remarkably so. She is careful to check the mirrors and the terms and conditions of the public meters, and careful of her periphery, and careful of so-many-things, but also, not entirely full-of-care.

After all, she is here now, has been here for some time. At 5:30 p.m. she slips into the bar at Randolph's and orders a Scotch that she nurses. Something approximating a meal follows, but anyone closely observing her would note that she does not consume much of either the beverage or the meal, before paying her bill and leaving a generous tip. Oh, but anyone observing her closely is so-observed in turn. This is how things go.

--

Éva arrives before 7. Call it 6:50. She is dressed in business casual attire, carries a leather attaché case.

She is armed in so very many ways.

More than you dare count.

--

When Lola appears around the edge of a tall building, in the shadows of the evening, at seven p.m. on the nose, the Shadow Lord notices. Smirks, mildly and wholly to herself, and turns in an arc for another singular survey of the space before walking up to the Uktena.

The pair are of a height, though Éva is wearing moderately-sensible three-inch heels, which lift her up to 5'10" or so, so perhaps she has to drop her mouth to murmur into Lola's ear.

"Let me guess. You received a letter."

Melantha Argyris

Melantha gets her letter at work, and that's pretty creepy. But that's how it has to come, because the tinyhouse doesn't exactly have an address other than one they have made up. She gets it, and she reads it on her dinner break, frowning, her spine and shoulderblades knotted up with growing discomfort. The first line and the third line are strange -- so hopeless, so plaintive, so needful -- but the lines in between them seem all but threatening to Melantha. Warning. She doesn't like it, and she wants to find this writer and give them a piece of her mind.

She borrows the truck, one more notch in the 'get a second car' vote that's ongoing, and drives down from Evergreen, glad that the promised snows have yet to show up down in the city.

--

The truck is big, and yellow, and... pretty hard to miss. It's been seen at Forgotten Questions for moots and meetings. It's been seen at Cold Crescent for other stuff. Melantha gets out wearing jeans and comfy sneakers. Her coat is knee-length and bulky, very warm, with a thick hood. She got her own hoodie to go under it, a thermal one with sleeves that hook over her thumbs. The hood is down, and her hair -- and there is so much of it -- up in a thick ponytail.

She just gets out of the truck, and sees a stranger, and frowns at him. "Hey!" she says, outright, calling over to Alexis. "Did you send me that creepy letter?"

zeal

Most of the people who work in the Wells Fargo Center and the shorter buildings surrounding it have gone home for the evening. The lots are emptied of everything but empty 20-ounce plastic bottles and cigarette butts and errant bits of paper fallen out of pockets and purses. Foot traffic has bled out and the only people still moving between vehicles and doorways are those with great distances to travel.

For a time the only two bodies out in front of the building are a hard-faced young woman and a sharp-dressed sharp-eyed lawyer. Their breath steams up from their mouths and the wind does not tug at the hems of their garments but the cold seeks to leech the life from them anyway.

More vehicles arrive. More faces they recognize from warmoots or the recent punishment rite. Irony in the meeting but a poetic sort. Melantha and Alexis are the only ones in the parking lot.

If anyone feels as if someone is watching them it is not paranoia bred of the letter's nature. It is the same letter. Sent via email it would have been blindly carbon copied. Maybe the wording would have been more deliberate in its vagueness.

Whoever wrote the letter had to write it five times. Travel to the places they spend the most time. Jam them into door frames or underneath furniture before sneaking off again.

Now she tucks her hair back behind her ears and glances both ways before she crosses the street to walk towards them. At a glance she is a young woman of average height, her build concealed beneath a peacoat, long dark hair beneath a wool cap. They have about thirty seconds before she's at the front of the building with them.

She appears to be alone. They cannot read the nuances of her expression yet. She walks with long strides and keeps her hands in her pockets.

Melantha Argyris

[alertness! do I notice the lady or am I too busy gearing up to yell at Alexis?]

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (4, 5, 6, 7, 7, 9) ( success x 4 )

Melantha Argyris

Unknowingly, this is how the two Black Fury kin meet each other: the female one, the shorter one, the one who looks and smells to wolves like a scion of their tribe and not a mere... y'know: kinfolk waitress, storming up to him across a parking lot after sliding out of the driver's seat of a giant yellow truck with black racing stripes, which doesn't look like something anyone should drive ever, it's so ridiculous. Making demands. Wanting to know if he's a creep.

He's not, but she doesn't know that yet.

She catches sight of someone else, too. A woman she's seen at warmoots and 'around'. Another one with a little ear-spike that she has also seen at warmoots and 'around'. And the lawyer, who she... also realizes she recognizes. But then someone crossing the street, as unknown as Alexis is. Melantha drops back a step or two, narrowing her eyes at him.

Alexis Theron Lambros

Alexis glances over at Melantha when she shouts his way, brow furrowing. Truth be told, he might be asking the same of her if she hadn't said it first. Perhaps it's cosmic irony that the two Fury kin haven't met yet, or pehaps its fate that they should first meet now, outside of the vicinity of those Garou who mean so much to each of them. Maybe it's just a matter of circumstance. Whatever the reason, Melantha eliminates the need for Alexis to be suspicious, and he shakes his head.

"Not unless I sent one to myself, first." He's already at the edge of the parking lot, and he nods with his head to the other Fury as if to say Coming? And then he's turning round to the front, where he sees Lola and Eva. Two more that he hasn't specifically met, though he saw them both at the judgment the other night. He frowns again and moves to walk toward them.

And as that other person, the new presence who he knows he hasn't met, walks across the street, he has another unknown element. Another blackmail-ee? Or their own person Mister (Ms.) Boddy? And that's when he stops where he is, between the two kin at the front of the door and the parking lot where Melantha and (unrevealed yet) Sam are, watching the woman making her way toward them with hands in pockets.

He's watching those hands closely, switching his attention between the pockets and her shoulders. When someone makes a sudden move, their shoulders are usually where you see it first.

Éva Illésházy

During those first ten minutes, Éva studies the hard-faced young woman while frowning, rather mildly, down at the screen of her tablet. Texting something; responding to e-mails. Involving herself in the digital world to provide herself with a reason for loitering here, at this hour, in this weather, alone in the largely deserted square.

It would be so much easier if she were simply to take up cigarettes, but

instead she looks like a thoughtless professional captured mid-walk by some suddenly pressing something at near-seven p.m. on a Wednesday afternoon.

The girl must know who she is, though. To deliver such correspondences.

Must know who they all are.

--

A sideglance at Lola's expression, long enough to take in what is doubtless some note of resonance over the letter she received. Some confirmation, affirmation: something like a yes.

And Éva is careful, turning her dark head (hair pulled back into a sleek chignon, her suit jacket dark beneath a short dark peacoat. Her 9 mm always within reach) noting the others on the periphery, shadoes against the parking lot.

Notes them, all of them. One by one by one.

And makes a decision, walking toward the girl rather than away, reaching into her left pocket with her left hand for a folded piece of paper.

It is blank but otherwise the color and texture of the letter she received, which was examined and then burned to ash.

"Excuse me," to the hard-faced young woman. " - are you the author of this letter?" The paper flashes white against the darkness, then disappears into back into her left pocket.

Evans

Sam sits in her car, watching as people arrive, a stranger storming toward her friend, and another stranger headed for the building. It's a few minutes after seven now, so this has to be it. These people probably received letters, as well, and chances are decent that this other newcomer headed toward Lola and Eva is the one who sent it. Or the young woman storming toward Alexis is.

Sam opens the driver's side door and slips down onto the pavement. Quietly, she shuts the door behind her and heads with a quiet, swift efficiency toward Alexis. If the other stranger turns out to be a threat she's pretty sure Eva at least will have that area covered.

As she gets closer she realizes that's no stranger at all, but a young woman she's seen before, at the last warmoot probably, or somewhere in the crowd for the punishment. And then Alexis is giving Melantha that Come along, Pond head nod Sam recognizes. She does not ask them to wait up. Sam may be the shortest of the lot by nearly half a foot, but she doesn't need people to make allowances for her just because of her stature.

So it is that she arrives at the cluster of Kinfolk a little late but just ahead of the stranger.

By way of greeting, she looks around and simply asks, "Letter?" Her long brown hair is down beneath a blue knit cap and her hands are tucked into the pockets of a fitted olive green jacket. Her jeans are snug as well, her boots comfortable, good for kicking or for running, whichever comes first.

Lola Hawkes

There's a tell-tale 'clack clack' of heels on pavement that catches Lola's attention, and she turns sharply to face the sound, eyes sharp and wide and a dead giveaway to the woman's intent for half a second. Whoever it was that summoned her here was in for it, simply put. But recognition dawns upon the Uktena Kinswoman soon enough, as she's seen this older dark-haired white woman at several Moots. She's a Shadow Lord Kinfolk, and she could be trusted, so Lola's body language relaxes (only a little), and she turns to face Éva more directly.

The question is met with a huff of air through her nostrils, but not blown into the face of the inquirer. "Sure did."

She didn't ask how the older woman was lured out here, or what her letter had said. She knew they wouldn't be identical, hers was very specific to her after all. However, it became clear after a glance past Éva's shoulder to spy one unfamiliar face and one that she recognized as a Kinfolk, soon joined by one that she knew to be Reese's sister, that this was a summoning of Kinfolk. They were all called out here, probably for the same reason.

Lola growled under her breath to the thirty-something (forty-something?): "This reeks of a trap."

Then, bit by bit, their attention all turns to a woman who is crossing the street to join them in front of this massively tall skyscraper. Éva turns and approaches first, asking the question that they all wanted to know. Lola kept her hands in the pockets of her vest, flicked her eyes to the other three that were congregating toward the area as well, then followed after Éva on flat-soled boots. She didn't crowd the older woman, but she would fall to stand at her side, looking imposing and brooding but saying nothing-- just glaring at the woman and waiting for an answer with what is clearly baited breath.

Melantha Argyris

[Correction to previous post: cut out everything after 'know that yet'.]

zeal

The woman wears running shoes with the laces tucked down. They will not flap or come untied if she decides to bolt. Her jeans are boot-cut and fit snug to her legs. She walks as if she is used to taking her time to get from one place to the next.

And as she draws closer her pace does not slow but the light in her eyes mutes itself and she looks from one face to the next to read what it is she's walking into. This is a meeting of her own making but that letter did not tell them anything other than that if they did not meet her here she would come for them.

It may well be an idle threat. The woman's posture is impeccable and she carries herself as if the repercussions for slouching are heavier than whatever she wears beneath her coat. The coat conceals her weapon but not the presence of the holster she wears.

Her cheekbones are covered in freckles. Her hair and her eyes look the same color in the dark. Yellow street lamps are all they have to push the night back away from them. When the attorney speaks the woman looks to her. She worries her lower lip before she answers.

"Yes," she says, and nothing else.

Evans

[percept (insightful) + empathy (emotional states)]

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 9, 10) ( success x 5 ) Re-rolls: 1

Alexis Theron Lambros

[[Per+Emp]]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 4, 4, 8) ( success x 1 )

Lola Hawkes

The instant the word 'Yes' leaves the woman's mouth, Lola is a flurry of motion. Her feet move her forward a step and a half, and her hands fly out of her pockets so that they can shoot forward toward the female. Anyone with an eye trained for combat can tell that she's not trying to strike or punch-- she isn't throwing from the hip or shoulder, so that doesn't apply. Anyone without that trained eye, though, will probably be convinced that Lola's going to initiate a brawl because her lips peel back from her teeth and she's already making a gutteral noise in her chest and throat, the sound mingling with and eclipsing the 's' on the woman's answer.

She doesn't hit, but she does seize the woman by her coat-- collar preferably, but lapels or simply loose fabric at the front will be accepted. Lola's difficult to escape like this-- she's fast, she's strong, and when she gets a grip on the coat her grasp is like steel wire.

The poor woman gets two solid shakes by her jacket before Lola snarls in her face.

"Don't you ever fucking lay threats down on me and mine again. 'Don't make me come to you'? Bitch, you wouldn't make it halfway."

Éva Illésházy

"An absurd sort of trap," Éva remarks back to Lola, rather agreeably and remarkably quietly before she approaches the strange woman. All the work put into those letters and their delivery, merely to draw them here? If Éva intended to hunt someone, she would not alert them to the game ahead of time.

Why do anything other than shoot to kill?

"More than this one, I think." An arched and singular brow and a cool dark stare that rises from the strange around the space, then falls back to her. "Which seems to have been quite the task to undertake. Did you do it of your own volition - "

Then Lola is stepping forward, lips peeling back from her teeth, all-in-motion, reaching for the girl's lapel. Éva grits her teeth, a supple spasm of motion in her temple, and makes a gesture intended to stay or still or forestall Lola before the Uktena actually grabs the girl, in hopes of giving Lola pause before she does make that grab. She will not, however, physically put herself between the two.

Lola Hawkes

Éva will make an effort to stop Lola, gesturing with a hand or expression or otherwise that this is a poor choice.

Lola likes Éva. Hell, she may even respect her. But Lola's been thinking about doing this since she decided simply shooting whoever was unfortunate enough to fess up would be too extreme. She would not cease her action for the older (wiser) Kinfolk's silent suggestion.

Alexis Theron Lambros

The woman approaches and the kinfolk start to converge on her. And Alexis is willing to let them before Lola steps forward and starts snarling threats. Just like that, the Fury kin is moving foward. He's not rushing with aggressive intent, but he's still moving quickly as he tries to get between the two women.

"Whoa, easy," he says to Lola as he puts a hand on Lola's shoulder. He can take a punch if she needs to unleash one at a target; while Alexis is in fact combat trained and knows she's not going to hit the woman, she may need somewhere to throw that anger so they can handle this. Alexis is none too pleased with this woman either; he doesn't get angry often but he's pissed right now. Still, threatening a blackmailer is usually not wise. They're often desperate or have contingency plans. And he noticed that holster, too.

"Let's step back a moment, and talk." He shoots a glare to the mystery woman, one that strongly suggests that the key word in there is talk.

zeal

[ST note: ret-conning Mel out of the scene because reasons. I have to adjust a few things but another post is coming.]

zeal

[oh right i didn't do this yet

manip + subt]

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

Éva Illésházy

This deep and frustrated noise, back-of-the-throat. Whatever else the woman might have said is forestalled by Alexis' intervention. Éva takes a distinct step backwards as he puts himself between the two women.

This lingering irony in the shape of her mouth. Much of what she intended to say is swallowed, changed, redirected with a glance at the stranger. Over the heads of the other two kin.

"Is that the reaction you wanted? If so, I think you earned it. What exactly is it that you want out of this."

Éva Illésházy

For ST reference: Perception + Subterfuge. Spec: hidden motives. Looking for: in any answers she gives, whether she is being deceptive.

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 6, 7, 10) ( success x 4 ) Re-rolls: 1

Evans

Sam hangs back a bit, a little to the side of Alexis until Alexis is moving to touch the Uktena kinswoman. For a moment, people are mostly focused on the potential for violence, for either a punch or a good shaking. Most of them, that is, except for Sam.

Sam who is looking at the woman, her own expression calm and just shy of pleasant for all that she received a similar threatening letter. Whatever was written in hers, though, it didn't drive her to a fury of protectiveness for the ones she cares about. Her eyes, too dark to display color in the dim evening light and lined with heavy black liner, shift to Lola before returning to the woman.

"That will probably make you feel better, but-" but then Eva speaks up and Sam cedes the floor to the older, more experienced kinswoman.

zeal

If the woman does not anticipate the rural woman leaping forward to grab and shake her then she does not react to it. But: she knew enough else about her to lance fear and anger up out of her in less than one written page. She does not react because she is not surprised.

The eldest of the four allies attempts to stop her and the only man present attempts to calm her. With a fist wrapped around her collar the woman stands stock still and watches Lola's face without staring at her. Watches too Éva. Samantha doesn't get very far with her sentence but she can read familiarity in the way the woman carries herself and speaks.

Anything she says Éva will be able to tell if she is lying. As of right now all she has to go on is what was in the letter. She thinks her sister is one of them.

"I don't know which it was," she says and now that she speaks more the Kinfolk can make out an Eastern European crackle to her accent. "But one of your friends bit my sister."

Alexis Theron Lambros

He's got his hand on Lola's shoulder, and he's half-expecting an attack from her. He wouldn't be surprised. Maybe he's expecting the woman to shoot them in panic from being semi-assaulted, or a sniper that the woman has as a backup taking a shot from a hidden location.

He was expecting a lot of things. He wasn't expecting to hear

THAT.

He really doesn't mean to be rude. It's not laughing at her, really. But...come on. And so he looks at the woman and a full moment of laughter gets out before he has a chance to try and swallow it back.

"Oh, for..." He shakes his head, still trying to hold back a chortle. It's just so...well, COME ON. "No one bit your sister. I can promise you that."

Evans

Sam's expression quirks, eyes narrowing a little as her mouth turns upward in a slight, disbelieving smile, the sort of smile that graces one's face when they're not sure if a joke has just been made. At least she doesn't laugh, c'mon, Alexis, rude much? She didn't get very far with her sentence, which was going to lead into a question, but the answer to that question comes anyway.

"And you thought, what? You'd tattle to us and ask us to keep our friends in line?"

Of course she would, she thinks, because if she made it through the Delirium knowing her sister was bitten by Garou she's probably afraid to face their shifting cousing head on.

Then again, she doesn't seem terribly afraid at the moment. Maybe she doesn't know what sort of people she's drawn out.

Lola Hawkes

Alexis was a man that Lola had never met before, but here he was walking up and clapping a hand on her shoulder and trying to (gently, in his defense) tell her to step back and step off. Lola at this point seems to be all but ignoring the other Kinfolk there, but at least she isn't redirecting her anger where it isn't deserved. Alexis isn't hit for touching her. Hell, his hand isn't even shrugged off of her shoulder. But she does keep a firm hold on the woman's coat, and seems even more bothered by the fact that she didn't get anything close to a reaction out of her.

When the woman speaks, expressing worry that one of their lot bit her sister and now she's changing, Lola scoffs noisily and shoves the woman backward-- hard enough that she would be forced to stumble at least one step back to maintain her balance. Lola's feet, though? They don't move from where she's planted them on the concrete. This is her claiming ground and standing it, and she won't be moved.

But hey, at least she's not shaking anyone anymore.

"Don't be fucking retarded. If you know enough about us to know where to find us, how to get us here, and if you know....--" Well, whatever it was that this stranger knew about Lola was clearly something that she didn't want to talk about and spit into the public air, so she cut herself off and sneered instead. "You know full well that's not how that works. Cut to the goddamn chase, we ain't idiots."

Éva Illésházy

"I can see why you're concerned, then." Éva returns without so much as cracking a smile. There is a degree of concern and a degree of professional composure and no real warmth in her eyes, but the competence is can be soothing.

Then Alexis: laughing has Éva shooting him a brief and quelling look. It is a glancing blow, before she returns her attention to the stranger, but seriously and quite precisely.

The flare of her nostrils.

Neither Sam nor Lola receive the same look, primarily because there are only so many directions one can glance at once. The first rule of dealing with the unknowing or insane or the egomaniacal and so many in between is to cede them the rules of the universe. Grant them their world and let them describe it for you.

Also: Éva knows that the woman is not lying. She believes what she says.

"Excuse them. I for one take this very seriously. Where is your sister? Is she still injured? Or is she experiencing...

"Other symptoms."

Éva Illésházy

Manipulation + Subterfuge: biting is absolutely how werewolves are made, yes you are right I totally believe you crazy lady.

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 3, 6, 6, 6, 7, 10, 10) ( success x 6 ) Re-rolls: 2

zeal

[perc + subterfuge: i call bullshit.]

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

zeal

Alexis laughs and she does not react.

Samantha asks if she is tattling, thinking she is going to ask them to keep their friends in line, and she looks as if she is going to bust out into a cousin of the laughter that gripped Alexis. Whereas his laughter was born of relief thinking the woman before them to carry ignorance with her hers has a different sire.

Her hands haven't left her pockets. They are still there even as Lola shoves her back from her. The woman takes one step back to maintain her balance and another to regain her stolid footing. She shakes her head to free her shoulders from the curls fallen down over them and she smirks.

"'Other symptoms.'"

The woman chews her lower lip again and looks away a moment. The glance away is not a tell. Wherever she parked is not within her line of sight. Soon her eyes come back to them.

"Your friends and the things they fight... they're all the same to me. If I have to, I will put her down myself. But I thought we could come to an arrangement, seeing as you know things I do not know."

Alexis Theron Lambros

The laugh, to his credit, does go away. It was already on its way to gone before Eva threw him that look. It was more a reaction of relief and just an emotional release than anything else, not that it would be interpreted as such. Truth be told, he already feels a little bad for it, but that's just the way it is.

And it's CERTAINLY gone when she says she might "put her down," her being the sister in question. That draws all the humor off his face, and he looks at her more closely now. Frowns.

"Your sister. Blood relative, or adopted?" He glances at the other kin and then back to her. "What sort of arrangement are you talking about?"

Éva Illésházy

"What symptoms?" A brief, lifting query. "I ask because it is possible that the infection has not yet spread. She could be cured, depending how far this has gone.

"Someone would have to examine her closely, and determine whether the infection can be contained or eradicated. You understand the delicacy of the situation. Give us her name and her address, we will look into it and have someone contact you to let you know if recovery is possible.

"Or if a more final solution is necessary."

Evans

The woman wants to make a deal, Alexis (and Sam) want to know what sort of deal. Preferably one that doesn't have some close or unrelated family member getting killed. And preferably that doesn't have this woman asking for access to other supernatural creatures. She is a benign threat, but a threat none the less.

Sam Evans, though? Sam is not a threat to anyone, not unless she needs to be. Her smile of disbelief melts into something pleasant and friendly. It's perhaps a strange counter to Lola's aggression and Eva's sharp tone. But hey, sometimes you catch more flies with honey.

"I'm interested in names, too," she says. "Like yours for one. How do we know we can trust you to stick to any kind of arrangement you propose?"

[I am totes your friend: charisma (charming) + empathy]

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 2, 7, 7, 8, 9, 9, 10) ( success x 6 ) Re-rolls: 1

Lola Hawkes

Alexis asks about this relative, if they are blood related or adopted to be made sister to the woman who didn't react to Lola's up-front aggression or Alexis's laughter.

Éva said that the infection could be spreading and tried to pull information from this woman as to the whereabouts of this sister.

Lola still didn't even believe that this sister existed.

The Uktena scoffed again, and swung her arms in front of her, then back to her sides, then in front again a couple of times. Each time that her hands met in front of her, it waso to roughly tap the side of a tight right fist in the curved palm of the other. This made a jarring clapping sound each time it happened. Thankfully it only went on for about four turns.

"Whoa, now. Before any goddamn thing else--" And she cuts a sharp look back to the other three Kinfolk, eyes burning hard on all three faces for a half a second at a time. Her eyes are quick to return to the stranger, though. "Who the fuck are you? To know as much about me and probably these others here, to have looked that deep into our lives, I don't trust a fucking thing that's come out of your mouth yet tonight.

"Shit. I doubt this sister even exists."

zeal

They have more questions than she has given them answers and they do not have a name for her though she not only has their names but their addresses and the names of their loved ones. In some instances this woman has information that not even the rest of the Nation has. Knows those who have died recently and those who are not even born yet.

If she had reached out to the werewolves themselves they would have cut her down right here or dragged her in for questioning.

Alexis knows that Phoebe and Thomas would have wanted her checked for taint. Keisha and Tamsin would have wanted to follow threads back to her sister, if she has a sister, if she is not out here alone and insane trying to goad them into giving up more information. Even Lola can't reliably predict what Hector would have done but they all know what Erich would have done.

There's too much variability when dealing with the ones actually perpetuating the War. This woman considers her options. If she were lying about the sister Éva would have seen it.

That Sam projects an air of trust and companionability - that it is an air - is lost on the woman. She's too distracted now by all of the questions and all of the possible ends to this ride she's started.

"She does exist," she says. "For now. If the day comes I do not recognize her, then no. This sister will not exist. She is my twin, Mister Lambros. And this was all her doing. I will take responsibility for not stopping her sooner, but... we all have reasons for doing the things we do, yeah?

"If you can stop this, whatever it is that made your friend bite her, I will give you everything we have. The computers, the notebooks. Our guns. All of it. And you'll never hear from us again. That is what I propose."

She pulls a business card out of her pocket. On the back she has written another address. She hands it to Éva.

"Meet me here at the same time next Friday, if you accept. My name is Nina."

That isn't her full name but it's enough for mystics to work off of. She leaves them with that. Turns and walks back the way she came. That's another difference between them and their cousins. She would have never given a wolf her back.

Evans

Sam's aura of trust and kindness isn't so much an air as it is a projection of her self. She is kind. She draws frightened Black Spiral Dancer cubs into the circle of her arms not because she'd want her last act on this earth to be one of kindness, but because that is the kind of selfless person that she is. She rescued a squalling baby from a burning bar not for praise or accolades, but because that is what you do when the helpless are trapped in danger.

She is good, is Sam Evans. That does not mean that she is trusting. The woman - Nina - turns and walks away and Sam, whatever the others do, she hangs back a bit. Waiting to see if Lola has another burst of fury to get out to draw attention. When it's quiet, though, Sam glances at the others, tips her chin in farewell, and she tails the woman. Not far, just enough to catch a license plate number or see which bus she catches.

[dex+stealth, +WP]

Dice: 4 d10 TN6 (6, 7, 8, 9) ( success x 5 ) [WP]

Lola Hawkes

There is an instance that the sister does insist, and the woman continues on in a flat tone and provides some information. It's not nearly what Lola would have wanted, and not necessarily what she was asking after in the first place. She wanted very much to know where this woman got her information and how she was able to find it there in the first place-- why she would have been prompted to dig, where she would have located their identities to even begin that digging.... This was the biggest, most important thing for her to understand because, you see, Lola is as territorial as the literal wolves she calls her cousins.

But.

She gets a name (probably a fake one), and a flimsy lead (although the address on the back of the business card would be checked into immediately), and that's all the woman provides before she turns her back on them and starts walking away. A more hotheaded Lola would have persued, would have forced hands away from the holster that she knew was there, would have knocked her skull into the pavement a few times and would have fought anyone that tried to stop her, or simply ignore their blows and pulling arms until she'd gotten what she wanted.

The Lola that stands her tonight instead takes a deep breath of cold air as though it can cool the fire in her chest, rolls her shoulders back so her chest is pushed out a bit and her back is straightened and her overall posture is larger and more intimidating, and says nothing.

She'll glare after the woman as she leaves, wait until she is out of earshot, and then say harshly to Samantha, Éva, and Alexis the three of them (this prior to Samantha sneaking off, as the Glass Walker was waiting for the Uktena to make her move anyways): "I'll give you one guess as to where I'm going." She taps the business card against her palm in indication, then slips it into her pocket and starts a distance-consuming long-legged stride back to where she parked.

Éva Illésházy

Éva accepts the business card with precise, fine fingers. Glances at the address, then lifts her dark eyes back to the woman's face. Steady, quiet, withheld. Shielded, assuredly. There is a quick-curl to her mouth, which is not quite smoke and is not-quite fire and is more and less than both.

She is remarkably careful, watching the stranger walk away. Allowing the name to unfold in her tongue, consider the diverse knot of other kin to whom the woman issued whatever she issued: pleas or threats or something in between. When Nina is out of earshot, she allows the other three to inspect the business card. The name, the address. To write anything down that they desire.

Then she glances at the rest.

"Someone's going to have to meet her. I think it would be best to bring a shaman along, as well, at the very least. Perhaps the sister is a cub. Perhaps she's Fallen, or falling.

"Stay in touch," the Shadow Lord counsels the Uktena. With a faintly ironic smile. " - and if you do go looking prior to the meeting, try not tip your hand."

Friday, November 1, 2013

They will come back.


Éva Illésházy

After offering Erich what intelligence she had - precious little, in the end. Nothing that could prepare them for what was actually beneath the graves in Cold Crescent - Éva asked him, quite simply, to let her know how it went. That was, quite nearly, her exactly.

"Let me know how it goes."

In a cool, slightly distant voice, leavened with a mild, rather bleak, rather cryptic smile. Cold Crescent was already being stripped down to its fastenings, and then the fastenings themselves would be undone, and how could she miss those signs. The shrines taken down; the furnishings trundled out through the freight elevators. On and on.

The graves are still below. They have not been moved. She has been to visit them but does not linger. No one consults her about the deep question of What to Do with the bones of the dead.

Some of whom are her own.

As much as anyone ever is.

--

Let me know how it goes.

Éva gave Erich her home address in passing; of necessity. She did not intend to remain at her office or even in the city while the young Garou plumbed the depths of the levels below 1999 Broadway. But, something about way she gave him the address ("I do have children,") made clear that this was no standing invitation for a social visit.

Not a strange Ahroun.Not around her children.

--

Roxborough Park, late. Some hour that hardly matters. The house is newer, moderately grand in fine suburban style, surrounded by a rather high wall with a wrought iron gate barring the way to the drive. Spanish style, the terra cotta rooftiles visible from the street. The pool secured and covered for the winter. Fenced for the protection of the youngest children, though the fence is low and custom, iron-and-glass. Absolutely tasteful.

When Erich rings the bell from the front gate he can sense more than see the whir of the camera from the security system focusing on him where he stands. Which seems like such a flimsy defense given what he is, and what he - and all the rest like him - are capable of doing.

And yet.

Layers of precautions.

There were other warning systems here, once.

Over time, they have eroded to little more than semi-sentient memories.

--

The gate opens for him, quite silently. Those are well-oiled hinges and well-tended technology. Movement barely visible in the curtains of some upstairs room as he walks up the drive. Before he has quite gained the two steps leading to the small front portico, the front door - painted a deep burgundy - is opening. Éva slips out. Wearing yoga pants and running shoes and a slightly oversized shearling coat, ebon-black, trimmed in equally dark fur.

Both hands in her pockets.

If he assumes she's armed, well -

- he is correct. She is always armed.

Dark eyes flicker over him; head to toe and right back again, measuring, examining him both for injuries and hidden threats. There is a twinge of something in the surface of her dark eyes, too hard to read, because Jesus,

he is so very young.

They all are. "How did it go?"

Erich Reinhardt

In truth, Erich was a little unsure what to do when Eva gave him her address. After all, she was a widowed kinswoman of his tribe, i.e. single, and she was rather attractive, and she also seemed capable of somehow making his life a living hell with a snap of those fine fingers of hers, so he was wondering if maybe this was some sort of odd come-on and if it was then what the hell should he do, he doesn't want to die.

So he was more relieved than anything else when she informs him, in a way not so subtle that he misses it entirely, that she has kids. I.e. you are not welcome to drop by anytime. Or ever, really. Unless it's a goddamn emergency and the sky is falling.

--

The sky did not fall, the night they descended into the depths beneath 1999 Broadway. The sky didn't fall, but the earth very nearly caved away. Death, death, and still more death, and the whole of the Beloved Horror rampant over the twelve of them, laughing, jeering, until Erich could stomach it no more and --

Eva will be disappointed, perhaps, to hear what he has to tell. It is so little, in the end. He was quite literally out of his mind, and all he has to tell is what others told him bookended by what little he saw himself.

Still. It has been a little less than twenty-four hours since the calamity. And he bounds up the steps to Eva's home, coming to a stop as she steps out to meet him on the porch. His mother would have Something To Say about that, about a woman -- a kinswoman at that! -- who greets a visitor on her porch without inviting him in for a seat and a nice warm mug of spiced apple cider. But his mother is not here, and his mother is not a Shadow Lord.

"Bad," he says, which is probably not what Eva wants to hear. But it's the truth as he sees it. This is the truth as he sees it, the most important parts first: "They killed Raspberry Sky. And then they almost called this god-knows-what through the portal.

"Oh -- " he realizes, belatedly, that he's making no sense, " -- there was a portal there. It was like this big glowing lake. None of us dared to touch it, who knows what would have happened. But yeah. We went down through this hatch and then down through this piece of floor that had melted away, like those pictures of Chernobyl. And then the lake-portal-thing was there.

"And the Beloved Horror showed up. All of them. And like I said: they killed Raspberry Sky. She was sitting there mourning her sister and they just butchered her. Threw her down for us to find. LAUGHED. AT. US." He's angry again. He's so angry, just thinking about it, that his fists clench, his voice trembles. "So I kinda lost my mind.

"When I woke up again one of them was dead and two of them were dying. But the rest were calling this ugly larva thing through and ... then they ran. Some of us pushed the larva back through. The rest of us chased. We couldn't find them.

"Oh yeah -- it turned out they were so strong because the Green Dragon had turned them into ... like ... shells filled with Its power. So, the Theurges called their souls back to their bodies. And then we could kill them."

He stuffs his hands into his pockets. Shrugs. "That's kinda all I know. Sorry, I sorta didn't see most of it."

A beat.

"How're you?" That's sort of belated, too. "How're your kids? I feel like I'm a really bad tribesman."

Éva Illésházy

Éva listens steadily, quietly, seriously to Erich's recounting of his story. There is no sign of disappointment on her sharply defined features, and for all that her mien is cool, there is a quiet note of - something rather more intense in her dark eyes. The kinswoman's arms are crossed low over her torso and her breath mists in chilly air. When his anger rises, her shoulders stiffen perceptibly, a certain bracing air about her that comes from long familiarity with their kind -

- and only modest familiarity with him. It cannot be helped; she weathers it, aware of what he is and what he can do, always, absolutely always.

By the time he finishes his story, she has glanced away, over his right shoulder at some point in the middle distance. Her arched brows are drawn down over her dark eyes, and her mouth is quiet, settled, set. In that beat between the end of his story and the belated question about how she is and how the kids are, she seems so very far away.

Then her eyes slide back to him, coming to rest on his eyes as he finishes telling her that he feels like a bad tribesman. There is nothing challenging about the glance, just a sort of quiet nuance contained in its framing surety.

"I'm well, as are they. You have a war to fight," a slow smile curves across her mouth. It feels mild, and distant, and also: kind. " - and needn't worry about the trials and tribulations of the potty training set." A gleam of humor woven into that remove.

"I'm sorry about Raspberry Sky." She is not at all shy about returning the conversation to its former topic. "Truly. You said three were killed, correct? So three escaped.

"The alpha?"

Éva Illésházy

Intelligence (analytical) + Investigation

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (2, 4, 6, 8, 8, 9, 9) ( success x 5 )

Erich Reinhardt

"Yeah well, I fight the war for the potty training set." Erich gives Eva a look, surprisingly astute. "Just like you do, am I right?"

She redirects. He scowls, his hands coming back out of his pockets, his arms folding across his meaty chest. "He got away, because of course he did. Sneaky bastard. We got Jeremiah, or whatever his Wyrm name was. And the older female. And one more, I forget who. But the Alpha's still on the loose, and as long as he's around I'm not counting them down and out. Or even down, really.

"So you should probably keep being careful," he adds, and then nods at the house behind her. "You pretty safe in there?"

Éva Illésházy

Intelligence + Investigation (AGAIN)

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 3, 3, 5, 7, 9) ( success x 2 )

Éva Illésházy

Int + Investigation again!

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 3, 5, 5, 6, 8) ( success x 2 )

Éva Illésházy

Intelligence + Investigation

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

Éva Illésházy

"Not merely the potty training set."

Éva returns that look, her own surprisingly direct, her chin lifted and that aura of calm reserve threaded neatly through her.

"They were broken once before. Lost half their number then, but came back. And came back stronger. Now once more, they have lost half their number.

"They will come back.

"And they will be stronger. Though I understand that I'm not telling you anything you don't already know."

Then she turns, following his line of sight to the house behind them. Her profile a slip of pale shadow against the bulk of the hand. The long fingers of her fine hands tighten on her forearms and her mouth tucks into a fine, narrow frown.

"Safe as anyone." A mirthless sort of laugh. "The children do not share my name; and the house is deeded to my mate's mother. So I cannot be tracked here by mortal means, at the least. We are armed. The security system is the best money can buy.

"Which is not enough against a particular sort of threat, but nothing is or would or will be."

Erich Reinhardt

All of which really just says to Erich: no. No, she is not 'pretty safe' in there. The young Ahroun is frowning again. He is frowning over her shoulder at her door, at the lights through the windows. Then he's frowning at her.

"You're right. They are going to come back, and if we wait long enough they'll come back stronger. So hopefully we won't wait very long.

"But -- you might need to take some steps to protect yourself all the same. 'Cause they might be at half strength, but the elders at Forgotten Questions are basically responding to this shit by shutting Cold Crescent down entirely. Which is totally stupid if you ask me, but no one really asks me.

"Anyway, my point is: if they really do pull everyone out of Cold Crescent -- I mean, not even thinking about the portal under the Sept for a minute, just the fact that we're all bugging out of the city means the city is gonna get a lot rougher. So I don't know. I think you should be careful. You know you can come live with my pack if you need to, right? Well, maybe you can't really live with us, there isn't enough room. I live in a tinyhouse." He says it like he expects her to know what the hell a tinyhouse is. Like he expects her to understand why he tells her the current location of a tinyhouse: "It's up in Evergreen these days. But you look like you could afford to rent a vacation cabin for a week or a month. So if shit gets heavy down here, you should just rent a cabin up in Evergreen. Okay?"

Éva Illésházy

"My Firm's primary offices are in that building," returns Éva, low-voiced and dark-eyed and watchful. "We'll be moving as soon as the lease can be broken." If Erich hears a note of agreement in her voice at the total stupidity of shutting down Cold Crescent, well.

He is not hearing things.

There are other reasons, too many to count, why she disagrees with the decision of the elders of Forgotten Questions.

Some of them are buried among the graves.

Still, her eyes cut back to him, thoughtful and she admirably conceals her reaction when he assures her that she can come live with my pack, and though she does not know what a tinyhouse might be, she hides that just as well.

"Thank you," when he is finished. Her voice is serious, as are her eyes. There are layers to her expression, though the surface is a direct sort of sincerity. "A cabin in Evergreen, okay." Perhaps she is merely humoring him, though the fullness of that cannot be read, precisely, in her skin. "I will remember.

"I suppose I should ask you as well: whether you require any assistance." Financial, she means. "Or your pack."

Erich Reinhardt

"I mean it," Erich stresses, precisely because he can't quite read her expression; can't tell if she's just humoring him. "If things get rough down here: cabin. in. Evergreen."

As for whether he needs help:

"We do okay for ourselves. But -- well. Maybe your firm shouldn't move out just yet. I'm not ready to give up on Cold Crescent entirely. And I've been thinking about ... I dunno. I'm thinking about trying to stay on there. Seeing if other Garou are willing to join me. It might help if we had someone there, like an insider. Especially since I don't even know who legally owns the building or any of that."

Éva Illésházy

I mean it. Erich stresses, and the kinswoman graces him with the edge of a small smile. The curve of her mouth is fine and narrow, and her expression remains as contained as ever, but: she tips her head forward, acknowledging the stressed point with a mild upward lilt of her arched brows.

"I see that you do." Her nostrils flatten as she inhales, considering her words rather carefully. At last, " - and I appreciate knowing that the option exists. Thank you, Erich."

Then, her head cuts aslant, something precise and coiled behind her eyes. "The building is owned by a - well, kin. Kinfolk-owned corporation, perhaps. So I have always understood, but my assumptions about the nature of the site itself were all wrong and it may be best to dispense with them.

"I will find out who owns the building. We have another six months on our lease, so - if you manage to make a stand in that time, I will see that the lease is renewed. If you like, I can put you in touch with Richard York, the head of security for 1999 Broadway. One of the Warder's brothers. He provided the blueprints."

Erich Reinhardt

Erich looks wary. "Um. If it's okay with you, I think maybe it's best if you stay in touch with Mr. York. I can just talk to you if there's anything he needs to know." Beat. "I've been having some, uh. Conversation malfunctions lately."

Éva Illésházy

"It is wise to know your strengths." A quiet twist of her mouth.

"And to be aware of your weaknesses. Keep me apprised and I'll stay in touch with Mr. York. And Erich - "

Already, she is holding out her hand. To shake. It is a remarkably human gesture.

Erich Reinhardt

The offered hand: Erich peers at it. One corner of his mouth hooks upward, amused or charmed or surprised or all of the above. Then he grabs it and gives it a solid squeeze.

"Miz Elly-shahzee," he butchers.

Éva Illésházy

"Thank you." If she is charmed, she does not show it. The supple edge of her mouth twitches in a manner that does not detract from the discrete sincerity of her thanks.

"I'm glad to know what happens, and glad that you survived. Good night."

She does not invite him in: not for cider, nor for a beer. As she told him when she gave him the address: she has children. They are young. They may not be able to bear him; and in any case: this is her home.

The kinswoman turns, opens the door and slips inside. It closes behind her, a quiet snick. If he lingers, he will hear her at the panel, rearming, reassuring the security system of her safety and her presence, and driving home a half-dozen pointless locks (perhaps not quite so many) on the door.