IC Date: 7/28/2002 Note: Occurs right after the events of the log for the same date. For the first time in over a year, Jack Salem was drunk. It was a seductively pleasant feeling, he mused, head buzzing with the scotch he'd imbibed less than an hour ago. Rhiannon had dropped him off in front of his apartment building barely twenty minutes ago, and theoretically he should have simply retired for the evening. Along with the four glasses of scotch, he was operating on too little sleep (four and a half hours, interrupted twice) and a meager dinner (about six hours ago, leftover Chinese). He knew that he was impaired, though he'd insisted otherwise to the kinfolk, and he knew the danger. In his present condition (and how the Ronin in him sneered at the stuffy humorlessness of this turn of phrase), he would be easier to ambush; his reactions were slowed and his precision of movement handicapped. His self-control was impaired as well, of course, and that was a greater danger. True, his temper was good at the moment, what with his mood being buoyed up by the scotch and a vague, undefined feeling of triumph from his talk with Smith (triumph over what? and how? didn't matter), but Salem knew damned well how unpredictable his Rage could be. One wrong word from one wrong punk in just the wrong tone of voice, and the beast in him would rear up, screaming. It was uncertain if, in his present state, whether he'd be able to deny the berserker. It was also uncertain whether he'd even want to. If the situation arose, there would likely be blood. Blood and terror and torn flesh. There would be violence and death and then (much later, a later that currently seemed as dim and unimportant as the turn of the next century) regret and consequence. So, it was dangerous, this post-bar stroll. Deliciously dangerous, gleefully and capriciously dangerous, and just as intoxicating as the alcohol itself. The apartment was cramped, hot, confining, a prison. For tonight, for this hour, for this minute, for _now_, Elson Avenue was his and his alone, and he was going to enjoy his domain or be damned trying. Or both, the Walker acknowledged to himself, sanguine. Or both. There was an all-night liquor store down the block from his building, its exterior girded with defaced brick and iron, its interior grimy under humming fluorescent lights. He was aware of the proprietor's dark, nervous eyes following him as he entered, and though he didn't see it, Salem knew, just _knew_, that the man's hands were hidden under the counter, keeping close to a shotgun. There were times when such behavior irritated or depressed the former Ahroun, but tonight he felt only pity for the poor bastard. He conducted his business as quickly as possible, paying almost no attention to the label on the bottle; it was inexpensive, it was easily portable, and it was vodka; little else mattered. He'd first tasted vodka at thirteen, only a few months before his father had finally bowed to tribal pressure and moved himself, his wife, and his Garou son to Serbia, back to the pissant little town from which the whole paternal line had sprung. It'd been a miserable year and a depressing birthday; he remembered having a vicious argument with his father -- sixteen years later, he couldn't remember what about, exactly -- and being sent to his room, and then climbing out the window after dark and taking off for the stables near the woods. There, he'd come upon, quite accidentally, a knot of cousins from his mother's side of the family, three or four older teenagers who seemed, at the time, to be impossibly mature. Late high school, with one of them planning for college in the fall. Salem remembered the smell of cigarette smoke and alcohol and tall slouching figures clustered furtively together in the yellow glow from a electric lantern. He remembered the stink and rustle of nervous horses and the way the other's muffled, laughing conversation abruptly halted when he rounded the corner and found them there. For a moment they'd just faced each other, four against one and that one three years younger than the youngest of them, and somehow it was _they_ who were wary and afraid. He remembered the glowing knot of hatred that had started to swell up in his throat -- it'd been an all too familiar sensation that year -- and had been on the verge of leaving when the oldest of the group, the going-to-college-one, had suddenly gestured him forward with a grin. On Elson and Fifth, Salem paused to break the seal on the bottle. The memory had been regulated to forgotten mists for years, but tonight he recalled the conversation clearly. "Hey, Rade, c'mere. Got a present for you." Suspicion and hope. "A present?" Chuckle. Another gesture, and then he'd noticed the Smirnoff's bottle in his cousin's hand. "Yeah. It's your birthday, isn't it? You're what, twelve?" The growth spurt had been still another year away. "Thirteen." "Old enough." Another beckoning gesture with the bottle. "C'mere. Have a drink. Hang with us." The offer had sounded sincere, so he'd taken the cousin up on it, suckered in by the thought that, despite the growing Rage and the abyss-like difference in their ages, they actually wanted his company. The first drink had made him cough, unsurprisingly, and had made his eyes tear up, also unsurprisingly, and they'd laughed while Pre-College had slapped him hard on the back. "Like a pro," he'd said encouragingly. "Like a fucking pro. Try it again. Second's easier." That first drink had gone down hard. He'd felt like his throat had been turned inside-out, and he hadn't been particularly eager to repeat the experience. However, it was either drink or lose face, drink or face the humiliating fact that, thirteen or no, honest-to-god teenager or not, you were still a kid. He'd stumbled back to the house well past eleven o'clock and broken his leg in two places while trying to climb the tree back to his bedroom window. And then, once he'd gotten back home from the hospital, his leg trapped in plaster and aching dully through the pain medication, his father had come up and backhanded him across the face. The storm of Serbian invective had lasted for a good half hour. Happy fucking birthday. Elson and Third, the commercial district. Salem passed by the Rialto and ignored the hopeless knots of prostitutes and homeless and disaffected youth with nothing better to do but watch for a chance at violence. The vodka burn down his throat was a welcome one now. Following the birthday fiasco, after which he'd never seen the Pre-College cousin again, he hadn't touched anything harder than the occasional glass of wine at dinner, not for another eight or nine years. That had been a special occasion, the coming-out party for the Milanov girl. What had been her name? Sasa? Sanja? She'd been beautiful, in any case, or beautiful enough. Long, thick brown hair. Played the violin. A little thick around the hips, but her eyes seemed to change color with her moods and she had a wicked wit. There'd been talk of an alliance of her family and his, and he'd danced with her three, four times that night. At least. He hadn't had to witness her death, which would have been a relief except that Anya had made it a point to give him every bloody, gory detail. She'd torn out the girl's heart herself, Anya had informed him, archly, and she'd gone on to describe the way the former kinfolk had dragged herself, naked and mindless and howling for blood, from the Sabbat grave. This before the night he'd been dragged in front of the whole Sept for judgment. Shit. He stopped a block before the entrance to Harbor Park, standing in front of a one-screen movie theatre that boasted titles such as "Goldfucker" and "Road to Perversion." The bottle had gotten half empty, and the summer night no longer seemed inviting or attractive; the goddess, half-glimpsed in shadow, had stepped into the spotlight and turned into a hag. He drank again and stood still, his head spinning and his eyes closed, willing the previous vision -- the city his realm, the street his kingdom -- back to life. More painful images kept creeping back, graspingly insistent, but he focused on a single face, not the Milanov girl, narrower, sharper, blue eyes squinting as she laughed, lights from Cesar's Palace glinting off the metallic gold strands of her wig, freckles dotting a star field across her nose. It was a tarnished talisman at best, but it pushed away the despair, the knot of anger tightening in his chest. When he opened his eyes, the world hadn't regained all of its former luster, but it was something he could face again. It was time to go back. He'd finish the rest of the bottle in private and listen to the compact disc that had arrived from Maine and think about Cesar's Palace and the Vegas strip and a marathon of Ed Wood movies in a hotel room with no air conditioning. Eventually he'd lose consciousness. If he was lucky, he wouldn't dream.