Original [Story] Abyss

Gaige

Mechromancer
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Dec 12, 2008
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Age
32
Location
Pandora
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Prologue: Kristallnacht

“Almost done yet?”

“I’m going as fast as I can.”

“Then go faster.”

The man grumbled and went back to work at the windows, tracing his fingers along the smooth surface of the glass seemingly without purpose while the woman kept watch for opposition.

The man was clothed simply in a black jacket over a black shirt, with black trousers to match. The true anomaly was his shoes, scuffed black and white things with red and blue laced through the surface.

The woman was dressed more elegantly in a knee length black skirt and neat black boots. The dress showed off her tall, thin body perfectly, the rest of her pale legs covered by black fishnet stockings. A scuffed ivory mask with a claw like hole carved down the left cheek held back her hair painfully but efficiently, allowing only a few white gold locks to sift through. What could be seen of her face was masked in a thick white powder, and her lips adorned with black lipstick.

Looking up to the night sky, she was surprised to see there were actually a few stars visible, and the sky was a dark navy as opposed to its usual impenetrable black. It was a clear night, but cold, and her attire wasn’t helping in keeping the chill out. But that was the least of her concerns right now.

There was a small tinkle from behind, almost inaudible had it not been so late at night that the streets were abandoned. The woman wheeled around instantly, eyes narrowed and cautious as she saw a small crack form on the window. The man who had been working on it looked almost like a deer caught in the headlights of an approaching car as the crack expanded, white spiderwebs crawling rapidly along the once smooth surface, making it rough and ugly.

Before the woman could do anything, though of course the window was shivering in its efforts to hold the fragmented glass together at this point, a siren blared from the structure, deafening the two figures standing outside. The woman winced, causing her ivory mask to slip a little, but the man took his finger off the window and fell on his rear with a grunt, scrambling backwards as the piercing shriek continued ceaselessly.

At that exact moment, any hope of the glass maintaining its composure vanished, and the window collapsed into dozens of glazed shards, reflecting the gaudy orange haze from the streetlights looming above.

The woman grunted softly as the man scrambled to his feet and into the building, a silver suitcase in hand. The sounds of banging and crashing could be heard, melding into a practical crescendo with the still blaring alarm.

While the man went to his noisy work, the woman kept an eye on the roads. Mist was beginning to gather in the night sky, smearing out the stars so that only the dim streetlights gave any possibility of vision.

And yet, the mists on the gravel roads were changing. A gold tinge not created by the streetlights was forming, swirling in beautiful yet distorted patterns, as though it was more smoke than wind. The woman had learned to read these patterns, and was immediately wary.

“Company,” she called, her deep, clear voice just about clearing the sounds from within the building. The man was clumsy, but at the very least instinctive. He heard her and made his way out, careful not to hurt himself on the glass shrapnel littering the ground.

The woman reached for a thick leather belt keeping her dress in form, flipping open a small object and holding it tightly in her fist.

The golden smoke began to glow, thinning and evaporating into a radiant golden ray of light; a hole torn in the fabric of space itself. And from this tear stepped three figures. All tall, heavily built, and dressed entirely in black. Thick jackets and t-shirts to protect from cold, and black boots, durable and designed for longevity. They looked almost like the man who had broken into the store just now, but more streamlined. Cleaner, somehow.

The woman stepped forward, one fist clenched; the right. “Go on. I’ll be right behind you.” Her voice was almost an inaudible whisper, particularly with the alarm still echoing into the streets, but he heard it, and immediately took off at a run, suitcase swinging behind him. The men who had just emerged from the tear immediately produced silver handguns from their dark garbs, pointing them at the man’s retreating back.

“Ah ah ah.” The woman stepped in the line of fire, and the men faltered at the sudden intervention, but quickly took a firm grip of the cold holsters again, aiming them at her face. “Your opponent is little old me.” She paced up and down, smiling softly through her mask at the trio as the barrels of the gun followed her slow, concentrated movements. “Now which one of you will I drag to hell with me?”

At this the men hesitated, their rigid training given over to human uncertainty as they looked at each other, and at this the woman made her move, throwing the object in her fist to the ground. A small hissing sound, inaudible over the siren, emerged from the point of contact as the smoke bomb hit the ground and burst open, releasing copious plumes of black gas that obscured even the streetlights and sank over the mist, and the men, unprepared, immediately inhaled in shock, delivering the smoke straight to their lungs and unleashing a violent hack of a coughing fit.

A single, whip like crack sounded from somewhere above, and a gargled yell could be heard, before a streak of scarlet shot through the air and burst on the woman’s mask, sending a smear of lifeblood across her mask and neck, staining a free lock of whie blond hair a rusty scarlet.

Good, the sniper had lived up to his word. His aim was remarkable. One down.

Turning her back on the other two men, still coughing, she set off at a remarkable pace, leaving the smoke and the alarm in her wake as she ran through deserted streets, parked cars gathering water vapour as her feet smacked on asphalt. However, no immediate escape route presented itself. To her left and her right, there were only buildings, and she couldn’t climb one fast enough.

And behind her was the sound of two more sets of footsteps, meaning the men had escaped the smoke cloud and the sniper. How galling. For their hesitation earlier, they certainly caught on fast.

A second crack exploded from the rooftops, louder without the alarm to mar it. But instead of the satisfying thunk of lead of flesh and the splatter of crimson blood, there was only the repeated sound of glass shattering, and the woman intensified her pace. That would be the last shot the sniper could get in. They were almost out of range.

And now the sounds of smaller, blunter thuds could be heard. Her pursuers were firing their own handguns into the night. Thanks to the fact that both she and they were on the move, it wasn’t an easy shot, and she zigzagged to make their accuracy worse still, before an opening presented itself and she dived into the alleyway, making such a sharp ninety degree turn that she would have fallen with even the slightest lack of precision.

The black asphalt changed to grey rock as she stepped onto a path, running through the alleyway and tipping over trashcans to slow her pursuers, keeping short, rhythmic breaths to maintain her running speed as best she could. The new surface gave her better traction, but she couldn’t keep it up forever. Making another sharp turn, she streaked to the right, running through the narrow space and-

Dead end.

A large granite wall stopped her on all 3 sides. Deciding hastily to retrace her steps, she turned back to find her pursuers hurtling down the alleyway towards her.

The hail of bullets was immediate and shocking, and the woman threw herself to the side as the hot lead surged towards her, behind a large dumpster that had been miraculously pushed out a little. The impact jarred most of her body and ripped open her fishnet stockings, elbows and knees, releasing a font of thin blood. She reached for her own gun, a thin black pistol; so thin it seemed almost fragile, ignoring the unwelcome wellspring of pain.

As she prepared for a shootout, the sounds of a third pair of footsteps reached her ears, and she looked out from the corner of her eye to see who it was without putting herself in a vulnerable position.

After doing so, she immediately stood up and strode towards the men, just in time to see the taller of the two struck down by a heavy silver blur. As the smaller one turned around, yelling in shock, the woman took her chance, grabbing the man by his chest and pulling him close to her. The last attack had left him so disoriented he didn’t resist, and the black handgun was raised, placed and fired through his throat with little resistance, sending messy spurts of blood through the air.

As her rescuer looked up, shaking from behind his bloodstained briefcase, she smiled shortly with a nod. “How much did we get?”

“A-about a thousand. M-maybe more,” he murmured, before turning his fearful gaze towards the taller pursuer, who had landed on his back, eyes closed, blond hair covered in dust and stones. “I-is he dead?”

The woman looked at the man for a brief second, making him look away in discomfort before she bent down beside the prone form, feeling his neck with her two longest fingers before standing back up.

A bullet slammed into his skull, and his eyes opened, lolling for a brief second in the short death throe he was permitted before his head tilted to the side, a small pool of red spreading out from the corpse. “Now he is.”

The man paled visibly at this, mouth opening and closing wordlessly for a few moments before he came out with; “What do we do with the bodies?”

“We do nothing,” replied the woman nonchalantly, putting the pistol away. “Except get out of here as fast as possible. They’ll have a tracker on you quicker than you can blink if you hang around the dead ones too long. They sent em and they can clean them up too. Let’s move.”

Without another word, she made her way out of the narrow space, wiping nonchalantly at the blood on her mask as she did so. Hesitating for a brief moment, the man followed her, holding the suitcase in one hand and his arm in the other, clearly uncomfortable. But he wouldn’t say anything. After all, it was him or them. Yes. That was what he had been taught.

Him or them.
 
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Chapter One: Fog

A dim sunlight streamed through the curtains, waking him up, yet the cold seeped in two, thanks to the rapidly approaching winter. The sun didn't mean much at this time of year; only light, and even that was dimmed from last night's mist, which had intensified into a full blown fog, rendering vision more than two feet in front of one's face impossible.

Throwing the quilt off hesitantly, the boy was immediately greeted by an autumn chill and rushed to get into warmer clothes; a thick white t-shirt and blue jeans, and a navy blue jacket to add an extra layer.

Looking in the cracked mirror on his windowsill, he frowned at the mess of his brown hair and tried to pat it back into a semblance of neatness, tilting his head to one side as he tried to calm it. He wasn't vain as such; he just didn't want to be a mess.


That done, he made his bed, as he had been taught from a young age, before the sounds of yelling startled him. "Hale? Hale!"

"I'm awake," he called back, patting his hair down once again before walking out of his room, closing the door behind him and making his way towards the rickety staircase, walking down to the kitchen.

Twenty or so other kids were gathered around the large table, of ages ranging from five or so to about nineteen, eating cold bread and lumpy porridge. It made for a rather bleary, depressing sight, but Hale took a seat and took a big bite of bread.

"Show some manners!" A plump woman rapped him on the head with a clean wooden spoon, drawing a grunt from him as he didn't even turn around, causing Mother Jaralie to move onto a new victim.

As Hale tore into his bread again, a small girl was glancing at her timetable for the local school. "Physics? Ugh. I hate school." She threw her timetable to the ground, before a ferocious glare from Jaralie made her pick it back up.

"Just sleep through class," whispered a taller boy as the woman passed. "And take down the notes later."

"Yeah, but if he catches me, he'll hit me, doofus," replied the girl, spooning porridge into her mouth.

"Theo doesn't hit that hard."

"I have Crispin."

"...Oh."
__________________________
After finishing the breakfast, the school bus arrived, a towering tube or silver and scarlet. The ten kids who were in high school were immediately whisked away, while the younger ones waited inside where it was warm.

Sitting down next to a taller boy with sleek black hair, Hale sighed as he stared out at the mist, which, although thinner than the previous night, still hindered vision.

"Cheery, aren't we?" murmured the other boy without looking up, frantically scribbling in a notebook, looking more than a little stressed.

"You're not half bad yourself, Barry." Hale raised a brow. "What are you doing?"

"Homework," replied the other boy. "Haven't you done yours yet?"

Hale blinked, looking a little surprised. "We had homework?" He winced. "Aw crap." He started rummaging through his schoolbag in search of a pen and notebook.

"Don't you write this stuff down?" asked Barry.

"Don't you?"

"Yes. I just leave it until the last minute."
______________________________
Nortborne Academy was a tall building, many floors never even used by the students or the staff. What it had actually been once was unknown, but this just made the dreams of what it had been more wild and unrealistic. To some it was a prison; an execution ground to boot. To others, it was a castle; the home of some ancient monarchy.

But to most, it was the school that sapped seven hours of precious time for education.

As Barry and Hale walked into the courtyard, where people in the same uniforms conversed. Black, crisp clean trousers, a white shirt, and a black blazer, with a black tie to complete the arrangement. Hale had had to hastily change out of casual wear before the bus came to meet the dress code.

"Ugh." Barry put his fist under his chin with a frustrated expression on his face. "I should really do homework earlier. Hey." He looked at Hale. "Did you finish it?"

"Uh huh."

"Whaaaat?" Barry winced. "How can you finish homework so fast and I'm stuck with two pages to do before the bell rings?"

"Iunno." Hale adapted a thoughtful expression. "Maybe I'm a genius."

"Ha!" Barry shook his head. "You wish. You're the one who got hit in class for not finishing the coursework last week. Or do I have to remind you every day?"

"Don't remind me." It was Hale's turn to wince. "I still have to finish that before the holidays or I get to spend my days off working on it."

"Yeah, well with lights out at eleven o clock, you're either relaxing or working. You decided to slack off." Barry grinned. "Like me."

"Hey, don't drag me into your one man gang." Hale frowned jokingly. "I just forgot is all."

"Well, your scatterbrain is getting your arms and legs caned, genius." Barry looked up at the rusted old clock face near the corner of the school grounds. "Aw crap; I have ten minutes to write two pages. I'm gonna find an empty classroom."

"Good luck, I guess?" ventured Hale.

"I'm gonna need it." Barry rolled his eyes before dashing off. "Seeya!"

Rolling his eyes, Hale made his way to his locker.
____________________________________
A slew of books and papers went into his schoolbag for the day ahead. As he consulted his timetable stuck to the inner door of the locker with a concentrated expression on his face.

Door shut, he looked upon the leering face of another boy. He was taller than Hale, though at Hale's five foot seven, that wasn't hard. He looked far from friendly.

Keeping a cool expression on his face, Hale spoke. "Something wrong?"

"You're an orphan kid, right?"

"Yeah?" Hale's heart picked up in pace a little. The thugs who seemed to have it in for the orphan kids hadn't really targeted him before, since he kept his head down for the most part, so this intimidatingly large boy was a little more unnerving than Hale's demeanour would suggest.

"Where are your parents anyway?" The boy smiled, but it was false; nothing more than a shark's grin. "I mean, you end up in that dump for a reason right. What's yours?"

"Don't know, don't care." Hale put his head against the cold surface of the locker with a nonchalant expression on his face.

"So you don't even know why our hard earned taxes are going toward orphan kids like you. Tch, that's sad, don't you think?" The boy's smile widened.

"Yeah, especially when people like you are really spending the thousands your "daddies" spend each year so well." Hale gave a small smile at this. "Aren't you failing everything?"

Hale didn't know why he'd said this. The retort had slipped out of his mouth before he could stifle it, and against someone around six foot tall like that, that kind of attitude was only going to give you a black eye.

The boy's smile turned to a scowl. "What did you say, you loveless scum?" He took a step forward just as a teacher passed. His eyes narrowed, and he slowed his pace considerably in a not so subtle attempt to watch the situation, dissuading the taller boy from making a move. Otherwise, Hale would have been shoved against his own locker by now.

"Leave him alone, Chris."

A tall girl walked up, looking a little concerned. Red hair, tied back in a ponytail, reached her upper back as she looked back and forth between Hale and the other boy; Chris, like a mediator at a fight.

Both pairs of eyes briefly flitted to this girl, holding a notebook to her chest, before returning their gazes to one another. "We'll sort this another time. Thank Marina, kid. She just saved your ass."

The girl and Chris walked off today, the girl talking in a fierce undertone to the boy, with wild hand gestures to match as she looked back at Hale apologetically and mouthed her apologies.

Hale waved a hand dismissively and hefted his schoolbag onto his back, making his way to class just as the belltower sounded its huge brass bell and the teacher who had been observing gave both parties a concerned look, before moving onto class himself.
 
Chapter 2: Parallel
_________________________________

"Marina. Quit pesterin' me, will you?" sighed an irate Chris as Marina walked alongside him, both looking more than a little frustrated at the other.

"Stop pushing me away, Chris. I'm worried about you." Marina struggled to keep pace with the taller boy. Although she was tall herself, five nine didn't really match up to six two.

"Huh?" Chris stopped and looked at Marina, his face softening a little as he looked down on her, her fierce expression unwavering. As though that moment hadn't happened, he bit his lip and walked on, quickening his pace even more so that Marina had to fight to keep step.

"Well... if you keep this up..." Marina paused, chewing at her lower lip as she considered how to phrase her next sentence. "If you keep coming down on the orphan kids for no good reason, you're gonna get a reputation as a thug."

Chris scoffed. "Like I care what anybody thinks of me."

"Oh quit the tough guy act." Marina crossed her arms, taking her gaze off him. "I can see right through you. I know something is up. So don't lie to me." They walked on for a few seconds in silence, until Marina, growing rapidly impatient, wheeled around to glare at him again, before practically running so that she stood in front of Chris, forcing him to stop. "Hey! Are you even listening to me? Tell me what's wrong."

"There's nothing wrong." There was a notable snarl in Chris' tone. "Except that you won't shut up and get off my back." He looked away, and Marina took a step back, looking a little shocked at his aggression.

Chris refused to look back at her as the bell tolled for the second time; a final warning of sorts to students lagging behind. "I'll see you in Chemistry." And with that, he made his way towards his own first class, and this time Marina didn't try to follow.
_______________________________
Class went by in a bit of a daze for Marina, who couldn't help being a little concerned for her friend. However, with concern came a little intimidation. Chris had always been a little hotheaded, but his behaviour lately had been nothing short of aggressive, bordering on barbaric.

She remembered back when Chris used to be merely passionate, rather than downright aggressive. He would fight his points out, sure. And sometimes he could be a little overbearing. But he would never have snarled in her face, or threatened someone who hadn't actually done anything to him. It was just unlike him.

Coasting through the inane chatter during breaks and robotically writing during class, it came as a shock to Marina when she snapped out of her stupor and her day was over; it was 4PM.

Rather than get on the bus like most, Marina's home was close enough that she could walk. Politely turning down the offers of her friends to walk home with her, she hefted her schoolbag onto her back and waited near the silver wrought gates for Chris.

The weather had cleared somewhat since that morning, with stronger sunlight lighting the stone path and asphalt road. However, mist from the previous night still lingered, enough to hinder sight at least a little. Marina sighed, shaking her head in irritation as she scouted the grounds for any sign of Chris.

"Hey. Are you OK?" A woman with jet black hair pulled back into a loose ponytail, with thin glasses perched on her nose was the speaker, and approached Marina. It was only then that Marina noticed that they were the only two in the area. The sun had vanished behind a cloud, leaving a rather dank, dark blue atmosphere as darkness set in. The days were getting shorter, and it was already showing.

“Oh. Yeah.” With the darkness, cold had set in, and Marina suddenly found herself shivering despite the extra layers around her body. “Hey, Ms-“ for she assumed this woman was a teacher- “have you seen Chris? Chris Faren?”

“Chris Faren…” The woman’s face creased up in concentration as she tapped her foot thoughtfully on the tarmac. “Oh! From class 3-A?” she asked, clicking her fingers in recognition. The realization earned a nod from Marina. “I’m sorry. He’s left already. He was supposed to be in detention after class but he never signed in. And he was absent from roll call after lunch. So I assume he’s already left the school grounds.”

“O-oh.” Marina shook her head. “Well thanks anyway.”

The woman nodded. “If you’ll excuse me, I have to supervise detention.” And with that, she vanished into the school, the fog wrapping around her body as she made her way back into the main building.
_____________________________
Eventually getting home through the fog, Marina breathed a sigh of relief as she leaned against a large statue of a powerful male lion, rippling muscles visible even in this lifeless carved stone.

Up the stone tiled pathway, bordered by mist wrapped grass and lush, artificially preserved flowers. She snatched a key from her pocket and slotted it into the lock. One turn to the right, and she was in.

The sound of footfalls on the wooden floor immediately grabbed her attention. A tall man with neat brown hair was making his way down the white staircase, adjusting a black tie as he went. He was dressed formally, in a black suit and crisp grey trousers that the mist would probably crease and dampen. The arrangement was completed by a pair of polished black shoes.

As he finally fixed his tie with a sharp twist, he looked up, only noticing Marina. “Oh. Hi sweetie,” he said with a small smile.

“Have you been called into the office?” Marina asked, dropping her schoolbag to the side of the mahogany doors and stretching until she heard a crack.

“Yes. They want to see me immediately, it seems,” sighed her father. He shook his head. “It’s a pity. I was hoping to get a chance to talk to you about school and all that.” He grunted as he started fiddling with his tie again, not quite comfortable.

“It’s fine.” Marina smiled warmly. “There’s food in the fridge, right?” As her father nodded, still pulling at his tie, she chuckled. “Just pull it up at the back Dad. Behind the collar.”

He did so, and breathed a sigh of relief as the discomfort around his neck loosened. “What would I do without you?” he smiled warmly.

“Die by tie,” replied Marina. “Now get going or you’re gonna be late.”

“Alright.” Her father continued his walk down the stairs, kissing her lightly on the cheek. “I’ll try not to work too late. Just go to bed early, alright?”

“Yeah, I know.” Marina lifted her schoolbag again. “See you later.”

With a final smile, her father opened the door, walked into the misty garden, and was gone, the door slowly creaking shut behind him.

Marina shivered; a little cold had slipped in, it seemed. Rubbing her hands together to generate heat, she made her way into the living room to relax. It was going to be a cold night again, and the fog was getting rather thick, as it always did this time of year.
 
Chapter 3: Midnight Footsteps

With night setting in fast, Barry's prediction had come true, and lights out had come before Hale had finished his work. It was totally dark outside now, and the fog had set in once again, even thicker than it had been the previous night, too.

As he lay on a lumpy mattress covered by a threadbare quilt, the only audible sounds were the howling of an autumn wind and the house settling with creaks, cracks and moans.

Joining them were a set of footsteps, slowly making their way down the hall.

Wait, what? Hale immediately became alert as the slow, deliberate footsteps made the creaky floorboards squeal quietly. Mother Jaralie and the other staff would have been asleep by now, and since nighttime wanderings were forbidden, Hale was immediately on edge.

His quilt rippled and moved off him as he stood up, creeping across the floor towards his bedroom door, left slightly open at all times so that the orphanage staff could spy on them to make sure they weren't doing anything untoward.

Reaching for the handle, he tried to coax the door open as quietly as possible so that he could get a look at whoever was lurking without exposing himself.

Unfortunately that wasn’t to be, for the door flew fully open so fast it couldn’t even creak, and a hand slammed over his mouth so ahrd that it hurt. Hale let out a grunt of protest, but then a hissed “Shut up!” made him cease his struggles.

As he did, Barry removed his hand, wiping it on his jacket. “Do you always drool like that, or only when someone touches you?”

“I thought you were a burglar, jackass,” retorted Hale. “Anyway, what are you doing? Jaralie’s gonna kill you if she catches you sneaking out.”

“Well she isn’t gonna catch me if she doesn’t see me now is she?” replied Barry, putting his hand on the door frame casually. “Now are you coming or not?”

“C-coming?” Hale sighed. “You just want someone to take the heat off you, don’t you?”

“Well duh.” Barry squatted, leaning against the wall for support. “C’mon, Hale. Live a little. Are ya coming or not?”

Chewing his lower lip, Hale shook his head. “Fine, fine. Let’s go.”

“Knew you’d see it my way.” Barry grinned and hopped to his feet. “Now follow me. And be quiet, for the love of God. Make any noise and we’re busted.”

“Cos you’re the epitome of silence, yeah.”
_______________________________________

Dim orange streetlights blearily lit the alleyway, thick with the fumes of about two dozen different kinds of smoke, as well as the already thick fog. A distinct chill hovered in the air, and the thick grey miasma blotted out even the sky itself.

“This place doesn’t look friendly.” Hale grimaced as a man blew smoke right into his face, and he resisted the desire to cough loudly. “What the hell are we doing here, Barry?”

“It’s just a little fun,” Barry smiled as he continued to make his way through the crowd towards a pair of steps where a number of people sat chatting. “A drink, a little good company. We’re not here for any of the illegal stuff.”

“Tch. If you say so.”

“I’ll even buy yours for you, Hale. Go on. Pwetty pwease?”

Hale cracked a smile. “Go ahead then. But it’s freezing here. Let’s not stick around for too long.”

“Sure, sure.” Barry was already making his way towards the indoor bar, almost invisible with the putrid smoke hanging in the air. “We just work so hard it’s time to relax a bit, don’tcha think?”

Sitting down on the step, he drew the attention of a middle-aged woman sitting with three guys that looked to be about half her age, if not as young as Hale himself. All three were whispering to themselves while glancing over at her now and again to make sure she was still there. As the woman saw him, she raised a dirty hand with blackened nails and waved girlishly, curling the fingers inwards as she smiled, revealing a chipped yellow and brown mess within.

As the boys saw her looking at Hale, they stood, two glaring at Hale as one pulled the woman up. She staggered off willingly with the trio, disappearing into the fog as Barry returned with drinks.

The taste of the amber “nectar” was rather bitter and unpleasant. “Uh…this doesn’t taste like alcohol,” Hale grimaced.

“Alcohol?” Barry chuckled. “I’m not gonna buy alcohol for a minor. You gotta respect the rules.”

“Oh yeah, like not sneaking out at night.”

“That’s not a rule. That’s just stupid.” Barry rolled his eyes. “I respect the rules, but when they don’t even trust us to be outside after eight o clock, I call it dumb.

“I guess you’re right,” shrugged Hale.

“Damn right I’m right,” grinned Barry. “Now start enjoying yourself.”

“Fine, fine,” smiled Hale, and took another taste of the bitter juice in his hand.

The flavour was growing on him.

He’d give Barry that.
 
Chapter 4: Extraction

____________________________

"Get yer grubby hands offa me!"

"I think you've had enough to drink," said the barman sternly, lifting her by the cuff of her black leather jacket. "Now go home and get some rest."

"I'll tell ya when I've had enough!" yelled the woman, struggling in vain against the iron grip of the barkeep. "He started it!" She indicated with a painted pink nail at a man who was leaning against the wall with several bloody scratch marks down his face, bordered with pink glitter.

"Of course he did. Now out." She wasn't thrown out too forcefully, but she staggered in her black heels and fell on her rear, her black miniskirt utterly soaked by the puddle outside, the moist fog already ruining her black and white, goth inspired makeup.

The barkeep didn't even check to see if she was OK, closing the door behind him, the tinkling of a bell informing her she was shut out for the night.

"Aw, who needs yer crummy bar anyway?!" she screeched, flipping the building two fingers before staggering down the alleyway.

As she made her way down the street, she flipped out a compact to look at her appearance. Ugh. She looked a total mess. Moving a curl of wild brown hair out of her eyes, she turned her face to all angles to inspect the damage. It was nothing her portable comp could fix. What a pain in the ass...

The compact was thrown back into a black handbag and replaced with a small pink cellphone, which she flipped open with a click as she left the alleyway, cycling few the names, most of which she hadn't talked to since her descent into alcoholism and violence. She finally stopped on a man's name.

There were a few rings before he picked up. "Hey. It's me." She pushed her hair back tiredly. "I need ya to come pick me up."

Strong headlights shone through the fog as a black limousine slowly made its way through the thick fog.

"Whaddya mean ya can't pick me up? Oh. Oh ya have a date do ya? Well is she more important than me? Well is she? Huh?!"

The tinted glass windows of the limousine rolled down as the woman continued screaming down the receiver.

"And the horse you rode in on too!" she yelled, before ending the call and throwing her phone back into her handbag.

The engine of the limousine continued thrumming as the vehicle itself rolled to a stop, the door sliding open. The woman's furious scowl became a seductive smile as she bent over to look into the limousine. "Heeeey. You gentlemen mind giving a lady a ride home?"

A gloved hand reached out to grab her by her leather jacket, and her eyes opened wide in shock as she was pulled roughly into the limousine and the door slid shut.

"Hey! HEY! What are you doing?!" she demanded as she was thrown on to the plush scarlet seats to the left with two men restraining her arms and legs. Her heart thumped furiously as a third man, the one who had pulled her in, reached his hands into his black jacket and pulled out...a syringe, brimming with a clear fluid which he moved towards her.

"Get off me!" she yelled as the third men approached her. "Get off me! Help me! Oh God somebody help me!"

But her screams went unheard, and finally silent as the limousine disappeared back into the fog. Just another street urchin, another alcoholic, another antisocial human gripped in a vice. Nobody would miss her.

Nobody ever missed them.
 
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