stilljustandrew (
stilljustandrew) wrote2018-04-08 10:19 pm
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[reverse darkest timeline au: you stay here]
The thing about a road trip is: you need roads.
No one's been maintaining this particular stretch of highway for years, which means there are places where they have to maneuver slowly around pitted and cracked surfaces, around fallen trees, around the abandoned wreckage of less fortunate cars. One such heap looks a little too deliberate, according to Kali, and they go back to detour wide around that one for fear of ambush.
There's an enclave somewhere around here, she says, calls itself Nowhere Special. Human, which doesn't mean friendly; there's every chance the ambush was theirs. Or of some enemy camp looking to take over their territory.
It's late afternoon, somewhere between misty and drizzly, when they pull up to the long-abandoned gas station.
No one's been maintaining this particular stretch of highway for years, which means there are places where they have to maneuver slowly around pitted and cracked surfaces, around fallen trees, around the abandoned wreckage of less fortunate cars. One such heap looks a little too deliberate, according to Kali, and they go back to detour wide around that one for fear of ambush.
There's an enclave somewhere around here, she says, calls itself Nowhere Special. Human, which doesn't mean friendly; there's every chance the ambush was theirs. Or of some enemy camp looking to take over their territory.
It's late afternoon, somewhere between misty and drizzly, when they pull up to the long-abandoned gas station.
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Then he maneuvers the car into what at least feels like a more tactical part of the gas station parking lot: away from the road-such-as-it-is, several points of egress.
Of course, if you're desperate enough, everything's an egress.
"She'll be okay," he says. "She's survived out here awhile."
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There's an edge of anxiety under her words, though.
"Any luck on gas?"
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"I guess I could try and have a talk with the pumps, see if they're still functioning."
Time passes; uncertainty makes it feel longer than it probably is. The threat must have passed them by now, Nita thinks, but she can't quite shake that feeling of danger.
"How much longer do you think we should wait?" she asks eventually.
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He would offer her a snack, but she has all the snacks. She will undoubtedly eat when she's hungry.
When she speaks, his spine twitches straight.
"Uhh," he says, and does a quick north-south-east-west. "Kali did say she'd come meet us here."
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"Sorry, also, I really need to pee."
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... Sounds good. I'll take the charm apart so you can find the car coming back."
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"Gonna be okay on your own for a few minutes?"
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"Yeah, yeah--you? I mean, you could even take the charm with you, if you wanted."
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She opens the door carefully and peers around, climbs out of the car -- then turns back and pokes her head inside.
"Was there any toilet paper in the store?"
She does not sound hopeful, but hey, can't hurt to ask!
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Why didn't he bring any toilet paper of his own? Note to self, next quest bring TP.
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Off she goes towards the store. The bell jingles faintly as she goes inside.
It's about ten minutes later when the bell suddenly jangles again, and Nita comes striding out at a pace just under a run. She heads pretty unerringly for the car and pulls open the front passenger door.
"We gotta go. Now."
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"What'd you see?" he says.
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"I heard something out there -- not anything natural, I don't think. I don't wanna risk it."
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At least he knows how to find the gas station if he goes this way.
"Yeah," he concurs. "Better safe than sorry. Uh, anything in particular stick out about the sound?"
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She rubs her forehead.
"I mean, it sounded like something big moving around out there. Either one big thing or a few human-sized things. And I thought I smelled sulfur." She wrinkles her nose. "But I've been smelling that on and off since we got here."
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"It's weird out here--environmentally, I mean. Even the rain feels like it resents me."
Add sulfur to 'something big,' and you get a whole lot of not good!
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A moment later, she blinks and focuses on him again.
"Are you sure we're going the right way?"
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"I'm sure we're going the wrong way. But I'm hoping whatever you heard will have cleared out in a bit, and then--hn."
Matt pauses to ease around a fissure in the asphalt that's ambitiously pushed up a bevy of reedy grasses.
"Ugh, this is what road trips back home were really missing."
That and mortal danger!
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Then: "No, right, of course. But once we get out of here -- I think we ought to keep going north. See if we can get around this area without getting into any more trouble."
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Kali didn't say anything about looking north next, did she? Was he zoning out again?
Past the fissure, he's able to pick up some speed.
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This stretch of road doesn't afford any immediate north-turning opportunities, but he'll keep his eyes peeled.
A long pause.
"Hey, uh, Nita?"
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