off to the races, beck/chanel
Apr 8, 2023 22:52:45 GMT -5
Post by gamemaker tallis 🧚🏽♂️kaitlin. on Apr 8, 2023 22:52:45 GMT -5
emi tanaka.
Her hair is a mess. That’s the first thing she notices about herself in the window, catching her own eye as she wanders down the sidewalk. Emi has her best poker face on, calm and collected, but she can’t hide the rest of the train wreck. Heaving a deep sigh, she leans in towards the dark window, focusing on her own reflection instead of whatever was behind the glass. She runs a hand through her hair, then the other, then can’t stop fidgeting with it until she gives up with a huff. She turns away from her reflection without a second glance, girl in the mirror dead to herself. The rest of her is an even more disheveled mess. Her black tights have big holes in them that weren’t there when she left her house, scrapes on her knees with bits of gravel in them she can’t be bothered with cleaning out. At least she’s still got her backpack strapped to her back, so she’ll be able to take off her roller blades if her legs start killing her. Emi doesn’t want to think about where she’s been. Sailing down the sidewalk slowly, she tries to get at the smaller bag she keeps under her jacket. “Fuckin tits,” she flicks the bum bag around, has to tug on it awkwardly when it gets a little stuck under her armpit in one spot while the strap catches under the strap of her backpack. She rummages around at a funny angle and nearly barrels into a stranger, only manages to not crash into her because she notices the face of a tiger where her tits are and gets distracted away from digging in her purse. She spins to the side, bursting out “sorry, kitty!” Only when she gets caught at a crossroads for the Capitol train system does she finally slow down enough to successfully take out and unscrew the small flask she’s got in her bag. It takes a long moment, Grandpa staring her dead in her face while making this pathetic little waving motion attention is what ends up getting her attention. She hadn’t realized, but he’d been speaking to her. “Anybody in there?” Dead behind the eyes. “I’m here,” she says. Something in her chest catches. “I’m here.” “I asked what are the crossroads, dear? My eyes aren’t what they used to be.” Emi blinks at him, once, twice, shocked by the radiating warmth in her chest. Alive, she feels alive. I'm here. Warm, blood pounding, heart beating, weightlessness leaves her and she’s back in her body, can taste the whiskey she stole from her Dad and remembers how she felt the last time she watches him drink a glass of it while staring at his computer screen, those big headphones of his drawing out the whole world. Emi included. I'm here. She takes a swig of her flask, looks up at the signs. Kachava and Ethel Snap. Without missing a beat, “Carson and Ethel Snap.” Ten blocks up on the same road, an easy lie to believe. “Thank you, sweetheart,” and she flashes him a smile, feels the lie catch on reality like a burr. She drops the grin as soon as he turns his back, pushing forward and pulling her phone out of her bum bag. I'm here. The dial tone pings before the phone rings once, twice. Ever impatient, Emi pulls the stupid thing away from her face about to hang up after just a second. Jittery, she felt every passing moment in the pit of her stomach, heart soaring when it clicks. “Nel?” Emi cringes at the sound of her own voice, the way it ticks up at the end. “Nellie, I need you,” the train finishes rumbling past and she surges forward, pushing open the door to a convenience store on the other side of the tracks that stays open late. The voice on the other end of the line is Hailsham though, not Chanel, and she feels her stomach roll as she take a loaf of bread off the shelf. “Beck,” she pouts into the receiver. “You can’t help me.” She rips open the door to a refrigerated unit and yanks out a carbonated energy drink with unnecessary anger, puts on a pout before rolling up to the counter. Emi shoves the phone into her shirt, the stretchy fabric holding it in place. She bats her eyes at the cashier and asks for a nip the little rum bottle he’s nursing. He spends a long time on her legs before handing it over, and she leaves with the bottle in one hand and his half empty pack of Red’s in the other. She never did pay for her things, but she cracks the can open and lights one of the cigarettes with a match before pulling her phone back out. Silence lingers for a moment as she pauses to see if he’s still there and listening before sighing. She glances around, swallowing, picking a detail. “I’m at the Pickled Lion,” she hiccups, starts moving down the block. “I need Nel.” And unceremoniously hangs up. |