ellectrical (
ellectrical) wrote2010-03-20 11:08 pm
Entry tags:
June 2007, Three Weeks
After three weeks, everything had finally come into place. It had rained until late into the previous night, but the sky was clear by morning, and Elle had packed her bag (a large black purse) with what she'd borrowed from X, her map, her gun, even another plastic bag of Girl Scout cookies, before locking the door to her room and heading out to the street.
She gets an early start, making her way to the alley a couple hours before she thinks he'll show up. After double-checking that the employees of the club have really cleared out, Elle checks her surroundings, then moves to the double doors, and sets her purse down on the wet pavement.
About ten minutes later, with the aid of a torsion wrench and bump key, the padlock on the door has slid open. She leaves it hanging on the chain, puts her tools back into her purse, and moves away.
There's a space on the other side of the alley - it gives her cover in the form of the hair salon's dumpster and is kept dry by a short, striped awning that juts out from the wall, over the dumpster and the door on the other side. Elle positions herself, and waits.
Patience is not one of her virtues.
But sometimes, when she wants something bad enough, it doesn't really matter.
She gets an early start, making her way to the alley a couple hours before she thinks he'll show up. After double-checking that the employees of the club have really cleared out, Elle checks her surroundings, then moves to the double doors, and sets her purse down on the wet pavement.
About ten minutes later, with the aid of a torsion wrench and bump key, the padlock on the door has slid open. She leaves it hanging on the chain, puts her tools back into her purse, and moves away.
There's a space on the other side of the alley - it gives her cover in the form of the hair salon's dumpster and is kept dry by a short, striped awning that juts out from the wall, over the dumpster and the door on the other side. Elle positions herself, and waits.
Patience is not one of her virtues.
But sometimes, when she wants something bad enough, it doesn't really matter.

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"Who are you?"
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He looks back at her and offers a shrug and a guileless grin. "I wandered into these parts a few months back. Didn't realize they were yours."
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It looks briefly like she might actually grab his shirt and shove him up against the alley wall. But after a few moments during which her frustration doesn't seem to let up at all, it's -
"Fine. Whatever. You're helping me."
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She never did answer him about the cash - but maybe he'd better ask her again later.
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"Get on his other side," she says, without looking at Jamie. But she gestures toward the other side of the alley.
"We have to get him to the doors over there."
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"Out of curiosity, how were you planning on carting him off by yourself?"
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Well, for Elle, he is still a lot to push around on her own. She hadn't planned on being too careful about getting him down the stairs inside, and now, she is privately glad for the help. But she's still right - he has the look of someone who hasn't eaten much in a while, his coat even becoming somewhat loose.
Without much difficulty, Elle lifts one of the man's arms, and pulls it up around her shoulder, then pauses to look over to Jamie.
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"Do I get to know why we're toting the fellow around in a dark alleyway, or is that classified?"
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The doors are still closed, with the chain in place around them. Elle doesn't let go of Rains, but foists some of the burden off on Jamie as she leans down to pull off the already opened padlock, and take down the chains. They all have to lean forward as she pushes the door open, and leads in to the now silent club.
All it really looks like is a concrete hallway, with a short stairway on the left that leads downward. Elle drops the chain and lock on the floor, and uses her foot to shove the door closed behind them.
"Come on, we're going downstairs."
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Well, it probably won't do him any more damage. (Might bruise up the apples, though they're probably a lost cause at this point.)
"What's down there, a dungeon?"
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It's not a dungeon, in any case, but with the lights out now, it's increasingly difficult to see as they head down. The only light comes from the windows at the landing back at the top of the stairs, but once they reach the basement, Elle guides them to the right, and slowly against a wall.
"There's a switch somewhere near you," she mumbles, shifting some of Rains' weight to the wall.
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Jamie fumbles backwards towards the wall with his free hand, finally managing to hit the light switch more by luck than anything else.
He's tactful enough - or wary enough of Elle's mood - not to make any more remarks about how she might have had a little difficulty juggling the man and hitting the lights, without an extra pair of hands.
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Or maybe several times before.
The fluorescent lights lining the ceiling blink on at once, illuminating the brick-lined basement. It's mostly stocked with cardboard boxes and wood crates, and Elle nods to the other side of the room - a few pipes line the far wall, and several fold-up chairs are stacked against it.
"Open one of the chairs."
After a moment, she thinks to add, "Over there."
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He shrugs himself out from under the man's arm and heads over to the fold-up chairs, casting the occasional glance over at Elle and her - captive? victim? - as he pulls out the top one and sets it up, trying to minimize the clatter.
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"Come back and help me get him there when you're done."
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"Yes ma'am."
He heads back over and grabs the arm again.
"And any time you want to add that explanation -" He's breathing a little harder as the weight shifts back onto his shoulders and they start heading over to the chair. "- would be fine by me."
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But once he's been shoved somewhat upright into the chair, Elle walks away and calls after him, "You can take his coat off."
In the meantime, Elle drops her own bag to the floor, and starts to set up a small, plastic table just more than an arm's width away from the chair.
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Jamie sighs and starts dragging the coat off, taking the opportunity to search the pockets while he's at it. He comes up with a handful of ancient half-wrapped candy, some spare change, a crumpled five-dollar bill, and a tube of lipstick from one; bicycle keys, three different house keys, a set of ID cards on a ring, the wrapper off a cheap sandwich, an empty neon-green wallet, an empty brown leather wallet, and a pocketknife in the other.
"Thief?" he hazards, talking to himself as much as Elle. "Drifter?"
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At the flash of metal in Jamie's hand - "Give me the knife."
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He's starting to look significantly less than happy about this.
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Almost immediately, her shoulders relax, and she moves back to the table.
Her tone is much more calm, and less demanding, when she tells Jamie, "You should probably stand over here."
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If it's torture, he's thinking, he'll - not interfere. Elle has her reasons for what she does, and it's no business of his. But he's not going to stay and watch if he doesn't have to.
For now, though, he's more curious than wary.
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She twists the cap off the water, and in a very quick movement, steps close enough to the man to pour some of it over his head before stepping back again. It's the best she has, but it works - the man finally stirs, and coughs loudly, pressing his free hand against his scruffy beard and then, almost on cue, fading entirely from view. Even the handcuffs disappear.
Elle continues to step back toward the table, closing the bottle of water again. "I don't need to see you, Claude, I know you're not getting out of that."
The silence that follows lasts for several minutes. Elle returns the bottle to her bag, and leans back against the table, watching the apparently now empty chair.
Then, there's the unmistakable rattle of the handcuffs being pulled against the pipe. The pipe is sturdy enough that there's no movement at all, just the noise his ability can't hide.
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"Handy," says Jamie, blinking.
(At least that explains the mysteriously moving newspapers in the alley.)
All right; so this is another one of Elle's mutants, superpowered people, whatever you want to call them. Someone else from that place she workied for, maybe? He feels like he hasn't got quite enough pieces to put two and two together and make four out of yet. Maybe three and a half.
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She checks her watch again. "- five and a half hours. And I'm gonna get bored way before then."
At last, the sound dissipates. It's still a moment before the man melts back into view. He glances around the room once, his eyes lingering longer on the boxes and crates than the stairway, and then back to Elle. There's a slightly panicked edge to his movements, but mostly, he just looked agitated.
"I really didn't think Bishop would send his psychotic brat after me here."
Looking to Jamie - "Who's your friend?"
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