[1/15/98]
Industrial Sector, Southwest Side
Several blocks encompassing the southern ends of 13th, 14th and 15th Streets
extend in an area poor and abandoned, with but a few businesses struggling
to survive. Along the northern edge of the district is a junk yard filled
with old washers, dryers, tires, and the myriad other elements of
human-created unrecycled waste. Smoke pours from a few factories, and the
more productive factories to the east combine with it to lay a thin film of
dark ash across much of the streets. Other factories, and warehouses between
them, lie abandoned or are home to the poor; at night, from some of those
with windows, the orange glow of oil drums used for heating and light shine
dully through the grime. Small shops serve the few factory workers who
remain in the area beyond the end of the working day, or during the lunch
hours grudgingly allowed. In the northeastern corner there is slightly more
activity in bars offering drinking and even some gambling in dark corners.
Along this stretch of street, the alleyways have stairways to second-floor
rooms, with the occasional alley entrance occupied evening and night by
painted women making blatant offers to the male passersby. Southwards, on
the southern side of Grym Broders Avenue, the train station falls into
disrepair similar to the rest of the area.
Obvious exits:
Filthy Alley Abandoned Factory Medina Coffees East North
Salem lurks near the huge, half-open doors of the factory, smoking a
cigarette. He looks haggard and restless, his hair unkempt and his eyes
bloodshot and shadowed.
The door to the coffee shop opens and out strides Sally. She holds a cup and a
small bag both in the same hand, the other deep in her long coat's pocket
for warmth. Her sunny smile seeming much out of place here in this part of
town, as does her soft singing to herself. She glances around before heading
north up the street.
Salem's head lifts, ragged eyes picking out the ray of feminine sunshine in
this grimy, dour part of the city. He brings the cigarette to his lips,
inhales, and then drops the cancer stick upon the cracked pavement as he
moves to intercept Sally.
[Sally]
Sunny and bright, Sally's blonde locks frame her face before spilling over her
shoulders and cascading down her back. Her bright blue eyes sparkle with
unhidden mirth and her lips display a warm, confident smile. Tall and
slender, Sally moves with grace and sense of rhythm which turns each small
gesture or action into something more.
Her outfit is college student norm with a twist: Simple blue jeans and
tee-shirt under a full-length duster-style winter coat. Attached to her
jeans are a pair of handcuffs, one bracelet closed on the belt loop just
left of center, the other one at the loop by her left hip. There's enough
slack left between the two that a faint metallic sound accompanies her as
she moves. From one of the loops on her right side dangles a white rabbit's
foot charm. Around her neck is a silver necklace which vanishes into her
shirt, hiding anything that might be suspended from it.
"Took the hit that I was gonna give, and then I bumped again, and I bumped
again," the words to Sally's song become clearer as he nears. "How do I get
back there to the place..." the lyrics fade out there as she spots the dark
figure drawing near. She slows only slightly, keeping an eye on the man
until she recognizes him. She comes to a full stop then and smiles, "Hey."
Salem smiles back, thinly, lips compressed. Up close, he looks like hell, as
though he hasn't slept in two days. His clothes are rumpled, and the black
hair falls carelessly over one eye, the left. "Evening," he greets her, his
voice hoarse.
"Shit man," Sally looks him up and down, then informs him with another of her
bright smile, "You look like hell." Her left hand emerges from her pocket
long enough to fold back part of her cup's top, steam pours out into the
cold night air as soon as she does.
"I _feel_ like hell." The Garou shrugs, though, his eyes tracking the curling
wafts of steam and then flicking to her face. The intensity behind them
still quivers on the knife's edge of control. "_You_, however, look too
healthy to be in _this_ shithole part of the city." Sardonic humor.
Sally raises the cup to her lips and takes a quick sip of the hot coffee, the
paper bag crinkling as it's carried along for the ride. "Damned straight,"
she agrees, then tilts her head to the north, "I'm just passing through.
Come on," she starts walking, seeming to fully expect him to follow along.
"Too friggin' cold out here."
Oddly enough - or perhaps not so oddly - Salem falls into step with the young
woman, ungloved hands slipping into the pockets of the battered leather
duster. "'Colder than a witch's tit,' is the phrase, I believe," he says
with a hoarse touch of European-aristocrat humor.
The kinswoman casts a side-long look at him, a hint of a smirk on her lips.
She continues a few more steps before asking, "So, like, you hungry or
what?" She takes another sip of her coffee, the steam leaving a trail that
dissipates before she takes her next step.
Salem shrugs again as he strides along, affecting an air of casual
disinterest. "Oh, I could eat, I suppose. You?"
Sally MacKay nods as she leads them north, "Yeah, dinner would be cool. Pizza?
Chinese? McDonalds?" She offers that last choice after a pause, and with
less enthusiasm than the others.
Salem wrinkles his nose slightly, grimacing. "Pizza," he says decisively.
"I've already had too much rat in my diet."
Sally MacKay laughs, a bright, merry sound which seems to help hold the
evening's growing shadows at bay. "Ew. Garcia's, then." She takes another,
more evaluating look at him, "Up for a walk, or wanna catch a bus?"
"I've been locked away in a tiny space for the past two days," Salem says. The
attempt at a light tone falls flat, and the words come out with a sharp,
tense edge that remains echoed in his body language. "I'd rather walk.
Before my legs forget how."
Tucking the small paper bag into one pocket, Sally shifts her cup to the other
hand. She gestures the way as she guides them into a turn, hardly watching
for cars as they cross the street; her eyes have once again returned to him,
instead. "Locked in a tight space, huh?" she has much better luck with the
humor than he did, almost enough so as to keep it sounding like a real
request for information.
Salem's own gaze is never still, dark eyes scanning the street with the sharp,
habitual wariness of a soldier too used to combat. He makes an affirmative
'mm-hmm' noise in reply to Sally's query.
Sally chuckles at his lack of answer, walking along beside him as unaware of
their surroundings as he is watchful. "So who locked you in there?" she
prompts in a light tone, clearly enjoying the fishing part of the
conversation as much as anything.
Salem glances at her sidelong. One corner of his lips curves upwards,
sardonically. "Circumstance."
Sally MacKay tisks and repeats in a disbelieving tone, "Circumstances."
Salem does the 'mmm-hmm' noise again, still smirking crookedly.
Sally MacKay makes a low sound in her throat that might be taken for one of
annoyance if she wasn't grinning. She tries again, "What /kind/ of
circumstances?"
Salem doesn't answer for a moment, pausing to glare at a couple of
dangerous-looking teenage boys wearing gang colors. One he and Sally are past
them, he answers her, "Religious ritual. To keep from killing anybody." He
tilts his head, lifting an eyebrow at her in a mild attempt at humor.
Sally MacKay shakes her head, sending a lock of her blonde hair across her
forehead and towards her eye. "Yeah, right," her steps carry her closer to
him, the start of what might be a friendly shoulder bump if he was anyone
else. As it were, she moves back to the distance she started from before she
even makes it half-way, almost as if pushed or buffered back.
Salem's mouth tightens in a spasm of anger, the expression passing across his
face and then away, leaving its traces like emotional footprints.
"Seriously," he says, after a pause. "I gave that meditation crap another
try."
As she reached the distance she started from, Sally raised the hand closest to
him to push her hair back, the action blocking her view of him and causing
her to miss the changing of his expression. "Did it work?" she asks, her
voice as warm ans casual as before.
Salem shrugs, regaining his previous mood, which - while not warm and
easy-going by any stretch of the imagination - isn't overtly hostile. "Not
really."
A light at another corner brings Sally to a stop. She looks to him as they
wait, her voice lowering just a notch, "So you going to try the other way,
then?"
Salem looks into her face, his eyes shadowed, and then gazes at the stoplight.
"Yes," he says, quietly. "More expensive but... it works. You know?" He
looks at her again, solemnly.
Sally MacKay returns his look, not so much meeting his eyes as studying his
face. She glances up at the light herself before speaking. "Yeah I know,"
the play is gone from her voice now. "You do any asking around yet?"
Salem turns his attention back to the street; his voice remains pitched low,
for her ears. "A little. It's... difficult, sometimes, for me. Perhaps you
could help." He looks at her again, and this time gives her a
genuine-looking little smile.
Long distance to Sally MacKay: Salem kicks in Persuasion to give himself a
little boost.
Sally MacKay steps off the curb as the light changes, looking to him as she
goes. Either his tone, his expression, or both return the smile to her own
face. "Yeah," she agrees, "I could keep my ears open." Now she waggles a
finger playfully at him, "But I'm not promising anything." Another few
steps, then. "What're you into, exactly?"
Salem dips his head in a slight imitation of a bow as he follows her. "Junk,
mostly. I dabble with the related substances, but only when I have to."
Sally MacKay's eyebrows raise slightly as they walk together. She looks at
him, but doesn't question his selection, instead nodding. She's
uncharacteristically quiet for a moment.
Salem lifts an eyebrow. "Is that a problem?" he asks, softly, watching her. He
tilts his head slightly, hair falling partially over his eyes.
Chin raising slightly, Sally tilts her head to throw a suddenly confident grin
his way. "Nah, but..." she lets that trail off meaningfully and looks
elsewhere, hiding the glint of humor in her eyes.
Salem's body tightens up, the muscles in his jaw clenching. He takes control
of his temper, though, forcing it down. He even manages another small, if
tense, smile. "...It'll cost me, hm?"
Another laugh from her, a sound more playful than anything else. "You guessed
it." Sally hmms as she walk along, her head tilted back so she can look up
at the patch of sky visible. "I wonder what I should ask for..." she teases
gently.
"'What do you want?'" Salem intones, like a vaguely sinister character on a
science-fiction television show (no, not Star Trek). He chuckles shortly,
eyes gleaming a bit as he watches her, a touch of dry humor in his rasping
voice. "Dangerous question, Mustang Sally.'
Sally MacKay edges just a inch or two closer to the tall Garou at his tone, or
was she just altering her step to avoid stepping on something on the
sidewalk? Smiling still, seeming almost oblivious to the effects of his
Rage, she watches him. "I think..." she considers, "...I'll just let you owe
me a favor. How about that?" She faces forward again, hiding the change in
her smile.
"An unnamed favor, to be cashed in at a later and probably inconvenient - for
me, of course - date?" Salem grins toothily at his companion. "How gleefully
dangerous. I accept."
She ha's softly, grinning and making another abortive attempt at a shoulder
nudge. "Deal." Sally looks to him, only to inform him with no great
seriousness, "You're okay. You might just do."
Salem takes the remark with apparent equanimity, lips crooked into a
half-smirk. He dips his head again like the mockery of a good servant and
says nothing.
[Then they go eat pizza. Yum.]