It is currently 19:50 Pacific Time on
Tue Apr 22 2003.
Currently in Saint Claire, it's a
sunny day. The temperature is 57 degrees Fahrenheit (13 degrees
Celsius). The wind is currently coming in from the west at 7 mph. The
barometric pressure reading is 29.85 and falling, and the relative
humidity is 45 percent. The dewpoint is 36 degrees Fahrenheit (2
degrees Celsius.)
Currently the moon is in the waning
Half Moon phase (58% full).
Harbor Park -- Fountain
Situated in the center of a large,
open meadow is a clustering of six trees, a flower bed, a few
steel-and-wood benches set firmly into concrete, and a flagstone
courtyard that is dominated by a large fountain.
The fountain is a wide circular pool
of water some fifty feet across and about five feet deep in most
places. The sculpture in the center is a mix of old and new,
traditional and modern: eight concrete-and-stainless-steel slabs about
six feet high are set in a rough Stonehenge-like circle around the
center of the fountain. Water flows from their tops, cascading in
bright mesmerizing sheets to the pool below. Rising above the steel
circle is a large marble statue of the Water Bearer, an androgynous
figure draped in robes of flowing water. It bears a large jug carved
with various Greek symbols, from which pours a seething torrent of
water into the pool at its feet.
Cars on the nearby street have an
excellent view of the park as do any residents of the tall buildings
which line the waterfront.
The murky waters of the Columbia
River flow swiftly along the east side of the park. Bracketing the park
to the west is First Street and the city of St. Claire. Recent
construction work is creating an earthen berm several feet high all
along the borders of the park in all directions.
The high-pitched sound of a well-tuned Ducati engine zips through the
city, and eventually grows louder, running above the hum of evening
traffic. The bike pulls up at the park's edge, finding a spot between
two awful-looking pimped Cadillacs.
Salem sits facing the fountain, half-slouched on a park bench with the
air of a resting, brooding panther. He's on the latest of some
uncounted number of handrolled cigarettes and near its end. Hearing the
distinctive sound of the Ducati, he looks up and in that direction,
then takes another drag on the cigarette.
Cat hops of the bike first, tugging his helmet off and grinning wildly
at Rina. "That was fun!" he tells her happily, hugging his helmet to
his chest. "I can't wait till I'm sixteen. Motorcycles are more fun
than cars, lots more."
Rina taps Cat's leg with a gloved hand, signaling the boy to get off
the motorcycle before she backs it into place. Both of them are wearing
helmets for once.
Salem shifts his weight on the bench, eyes narrowing behind dark lenses
as he considers. His head tips back, mouth opening to blow a smoke ring
at the still-lit sky. And waits, not knowing if that was truly Rina's
bike he heard, and knowing that if it was, she'll be coming his way
shortly.
After parking the bike and killing the engine, Rina dismounts with the
ease of long habit. She strips off her helmet and hangs it on one of
the bars, then heads into the park, gloves hands running through her
hair. It has grown shaggy and mussed since John's death, a mop almost
as long and unruly as Cat's; the two are like mirrors of each other,
angelic blonde boy and dark leather-clad street tough.
The slightly smaller boy doesn't have gloves to run through his hair,
but luckily the helmet covered most of it and it's still kinda clinging
to his head. He tilts his head, and then, on a whim, bows to Rina and
offers her his arm. "May I take the lady on a s...stroll?" he stammers
shyly. That's a line from one of his books, but shh.
Rina's laugh is carefree enough to carry--though it might be an
unfamiliar sound by now. "Of course. Ever so gentlemanly of you." She
slides her arm formally through his, just like she does with Mister
Salem; scanning the park, she spots the dour Walker in short order, and
they head in that direction at a leisurely pace.
Cat's standing as tall as he can, chest puffed out in pride. He spots
Salem a few seconds after Rina and just smiles a bit, as if to say,
Look! Isn't it nice? She's happy!
Salem has his scarred face turned toward the pair and watches them
approach with veiled eyes, smoke curling up from the cigarette held
between two fingers of his right hand. He offers up a casual-sounding,
"Evening," once they're within speaking distance.
Rina purses her lips, a wry smile twisting at them--a familiar cynical
expression that belongs to her. "That's bad for ya."
Rina pages: Uh-oh. Does he seem like
he's in a bad mood?
You paged Rina with 'Not bad mood,
but not great one either.'.
Something makes Rina trail off and study the Walker with a touch of
seriousness or maybe concern. She tips her head slightly, and unthreads
her arm from Cat's, letting the young teen's ebullience and good mood
carry the conversation while she watches Salem's face.
"Happy Easter," the theurge calls out to Salem cheerfully. He stands
next to Rina a fidgety boy full of energy. Someone's had Dr. Pepper
recently. "We visited your house, but you weren't there. Are you
talking a walk too?"
"Whatever doesn't kill me makes me stronger," Salem says in reply to
Rina's remark, his tone sardonic. His face is difficult to read,
especially with the sunglasses masking his eyes, but there are subtle
signs that his air of relaxation is more than a little feigned. He
focusses on the boy. "Keeping an eye on things. Hearing things. Like
certain young men who have been wandering alone into places they
shouldn't."
That cuts the strings to Cat's cheerfulness. His smile falls off his
face, and he hides his hands in his pockets quickly. "I...I..." he
stutters, lamely trying to find some reason to explain what he did.
Blue eyes glance sadly and fearfully at Rina. "It...I was...I found it
and I thought..." He takes a deep breath, steeling himself for the
lecture and possible blow. "It worked," he adds sadly.
Salem's mouth thins into a frown. He takes another drag from the
cigarette and exhales, slowly. "It worked?" he echoes, his voice quite
mild.
Cat winces. "Am I in trouble?" he asks timidly.
"Why did you do it?" the Philodox responds, flatly.
The boy risks a glance at the Kin and then at Salem, reluctantly
pulling his left hand out of his pocket and sticking his arm out for
the Philodox's inspection.
Salem frowns, then sets the cigarette between his lips and sits up,
leaning forward to take Cat's wrist and push up his sleeve. His grip is
firm, but not painful. Yet.
Wrapped around several times his wrist is bright red yarn, and hanging
from it is a circular mirror, the size of a half-dollar. It's cheap and
chipped on the back- they used to make dining room chandeliers and
lamps out of this stuff. Cat's quiet as he lets the elder see his
'invention.'
Salem studies the cub's decoration for a moment, then looks into his
face; Cat sees a dark, distorted reflection of himself in the
halfmoon's sunglasses. "Explain." He still has Cat's wrist.
Rina wraps both arms around herself and only watches, her eyes
narrowed. She never takes them from Salem.
Cat looks at the ground, anywhere but Salem's glasses and his
outstretched arm. "You can get into the Umbra by mirrors, and I
wanted...I wanted to see if you could do it from -any- mirror. Not just
bathrooms." He risks peeking out of one eye at Salem. "So if there's an
emergency, you can go in an' out anywhere. You don't have to run to a
sink mirror."
Salem's mouth thins in displeasure. "I could have told you that. Any
Garou could." He releases Cat's arm and sits back, taking the cigarette
from his mouth and tapping ash off the end of it.
A strange, almost neutral expression comes to Rina's face. "You hafta
be careful, Cat. It wouldn't hard to wait for someone to go with you."
"Oh." Cat looks down at his wrist in disappointment, rubbing at the
skin where the yarn has irritated it and then just stuffs the offending
appendage back into his pocket. "Well, um...I just wanted to see if it
could work." He looks up at Rina, frightened and sad at once. "It- it
was just an experiment! I wasn't going to stay long, it's just these
people showed up and-" He clamps his mouth shut. Oops.
Rina finally turns her dark eyes to Cat. Now she's angry, yoo.
"Which is how I knew," Salem says, taking another drag. "One of them
was a Bone Gnawer. New one in town named Raul. Who else?"
"I...I don't know," Cat admits, dipping his head and closing his eyes
tight. "One of 'em...had a funny coat on. One had a coat of fur and the
other had a coat of shiny plates. There was a girl, an' she turned into
a wolf and still had lots of earrings." He bites his lip, still not
looking up. "I'm sorry...I wasn't wandering. I just wanted to see..."
Salem considers this. "Was the man with the fur coat tall and
overweight?"
Rina's expression tightens further, as she listens.
The boy considers, then nods unhappily. "Kinda."
Salem grunts. He takes a final drag off the cigarette, then
extinguishes on the edge of the bench. "Sounds like Reggie. The man
with the plates on his coat was Raul." With a flick of his fingers, he
sends the butt into the wastecan nearby. He scowls at Cat. "I'm getting
tired of this, Cat."
"Cat," Rina says quietly, "why don't you go wait by the bike."
Blinking unhappily, Cat mumbles his goodbye to Salem and turns away,
starting at a slow walk and then running to the bike. He skids to a
halt next to the bike and stands there with his back to them as he hugs
his helmet to his chest, and waits for Rina to collect him.
Rina's gaze returns to Salem, and her jaw works for a moment. "I didn't
know," she says quietly. "I'm sorry."
Salem watches the boy go, still frowning, then shakes his head and
reaches inside his coat for the black cigarette case. "Mnh." His voice
turns milder. "Not your fault. It's not your job to watch him
twenty-four seven. He should have known better."
Rina crosses her arms a little tighter. "Yeah, and I oughta teach him
better."
Salem grimaces. "_I_ taught him better," he grumbles, taking out
another of the handrolled cigarettes and putting it in his mouth.
"Thought I had, anyway. Hmf." The case snaps shut.
Rina looks away, off toward Cat and the Ducati. "Jack," she murmurs.
The dark eyes return to him, and she swallows again. "What's going on?"
Salem repockets the case and fishes for his lighter. "Nothing. I'm
irritated at having to find out about my cubs being idiotically
disobedient from dogs who think that washing their hair in the fucking
park fountain is acceptable behavior. Extremely irritated." The unlit
cigarette, loosely held between his lips, bobs as he speaks.
Rina's chins lifts slightly. "So this Raul--some mutt--put you in a bad
mood? Come off it, Jack." She reaches over to pluck the cigarette from
his lips.
She succeeds in this, but gets a curt, rumbly grunt in response. The
beast is out tonight, and it's feeling mean.
Rina sits down beside him, carefully--too close for the comfort of that
beast. She turns the cigarette over and over in her hands. "Jack..."
Her voice is quieter, her posture focused on him in that absorbed way
she has. "Is that all?"
Salem shifts his weight, shoulders rolling in a tight shrug. "It's been
a bad day, that's all," he says, folding his arms across his chest.
"Thousand little minor irritants. Cat's fucking field trip is just the
fucking cherry."
Rina wets her lips. "When did it happen? Just so I know."
"Last night," Salem replies.
Rina nods grimly, lowering her eyes. "Nothing else big? Just... just a
bad day?" She sounds terribly worried, but she makes an effort to keep
her eyes on the cigarette in her hands.
Salem cocks his head slightly, favoring his good side as he eyes her.
"Oh, yes, and I discovered that I'm a member of a dying race fighting a
losing war." There's more than a hint of the sardonic in his voice; he
gives her a thin smile, all cynical humor. "Then the world ended. It
was, as they say, 'a real bringdown'."
Rina flicks the cigarette over her shoulder. "Old news," she says, and
reaches up to touch his cheek. "And it's not over yet, y'know."
The Philodox makes a little 'hrmph' noise. "There's a fine for
littering, you know." He's being stubborn. Contrary. Not quite joking,
nor quite serious.
She seems to be dead serious, in fact. "Yeah?" The dark eyes remain
sober, but a faint smile tugs at one corner of her mouth. "I'll get it
later."
"You do that." He shifts again, stretching. "Feh."
"Hey..." She watches him intently, and straightens a little. "Let's go
out. Tonight. I'll take Cat home, fix dinner, then maybe you and me can
go shoot some pool or somethin'. Risk life and limb."
Salem sits forward, then takes off the sunglasses. His eyes have
sleep-dep shadows under them again... or rather still. "If you want,
sure," he says, slipping the glasses inside his coat. "Meet you at
Reggie's, then?"
Rina grins, relief mixing with worry. She nods minutely, and lifts a
hand--but she doesn't touch him, instead cutting the gesture short,
turning away and standing to look for that tossed cigarette.
Salem pushes to his feet. As she looks for the cigarette, he takes out
his cellphone and dials. She hears him speak into it a moment later.
"Mel. It's Jack. I'll be in late tonight... don't wait up. And don't
worry, it's not business." He pauses, glancing toward the kinswoman,
then adds, "See you," to the message and then clicks off.
Rina pockets the cigarette, and then offers him a faint smile. Then she
straightens, and visibly puts on her game face, looking sober as she
paces toward the bike and Cat.
Salem puts the cellphone away, his gaze following her as she heads away.