Sam Winchester (
st_andingtall) wrote in
strangetrip2017-01-30 11:34 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
[EP] What a nice surprise
"Eugene Thompson," repeated the Innkeeper, when Sam finally broke down and stopped searching for the wheelchair guy to ask. "One moment, please. Do you need any--"
"No. I have plenty of towels." What the heck was it with the towels, anyway? Sam shifted his weight to his other foot and tried not to screw up his face too much. The guy was just doing his job. Even if that was literally all he could do. "Um, but thanks."
"You're welcome." The Innkeeper did something that was probably smile, but Sam couldn't have described it, or his face for the life of him. "Ah, yes." He tapped a finger against the rounded black monitor screen that was as almost as old as Sam. "Mr. Thompson has checked out."
"Huh?" Sam's felt the surprise overtake his face and he had to work hard to plant his hands at the edge of the counter instead of reaching across to grab the guy by the collar. "I thought you said we couldn't leave."
"That is correct."
"But Flash--"
"Flash Thompson has checked out."
"How does that even make--" Never mind. The lyrics of Hotel California came to him. "So, you're saying he's dead and I should look for his ghost?"
"I have no record of His Ghost."
Sam rubbed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger. "Okay, yeah. Thanks."
After he'd stalked away from the front desk, Sam dropped into one of the round red leather booths in the Copper Cafe and pulled out his cell...which was absolutely fucking useless and he still forgot half the time. "Great. The Innkeeper's useless. Flash has 'checked out'. And I can't text anyone to tell them about it."
Oh yeah. Life in the days before instantaneous communication sucked. And blew.
"No. I have plenty of towels." What the heck was it with the towels, anyway? Sam shifted his weight to his other foot and tried not to screw up his face too much. The guy was just doing his job. Even if that was literally all he could do. "Um, but thanks."
"You're welcome." The Innkeeper did something that was probably smile, but Sam couldn't have described it, or his face for the life of him. "Ah, yes." He tapped a finger against the rounded black monitor screen that was as almost as old as Sam. "Mr. Thompson has checked out."
"Huh?" Sam's felt the surprise overtake his face and he had to work hard to plant his hands at the edge of the counter instead of reaching across to grab the guy by the collar. "I thought you said we couldn't leave."
"That is correct."
"But Flash--"
"Flash Thompson has checked out."
"How does that even make--" Never mind. The lyrics of Hotel California came to him. "So, you're saying he's dead and I should look for his ghost?"
"I have no record of His Ghost."
Sam rubbed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger. "Okay, yeah. Thanks."
After he'd stalked away from the front desk, Sam dropped into one of the round red leather booths in the Copper Cafe and pulled out his cell...which was absolutely fucking useless and he still forgot half the time. "Great. The Innkeeper's useless. Flash has 'checked out'. And I can't text anyone to tell them about it."
Oh yeah. Life in the days before instantaneous communication sucked. And blew.
no subject
Gotham in a way had been cruel to her in that regard. She'd learned something about how to hope, and now that was backfiring.
Snow wilted so gradually that even she could hardly tell between one moment and the next when exactly the light died out. "Oh."
no subject
One look and Sam's heart went out to her. He moved over in the booth to make room for her. Even though he didn't really expect her to sit, he hoped she would.
"I was just gonna get something to eat. Want anything?"
no subject
But that scared, screaming child inside still didn't know when she was going to eat next, and in some situations she just won.
no subject
Weird as it was, Sam had somehow gone from younger brother on a crusade to get his brother out of a demon to deal, to an older brother with a handful of sisters. Sam didn't like bullies and someone who kidnapped a bunch of young girls away from their families when they clearly needed them was definitely a bully. Which meant whether they wanted it or not, they had a protector in Sam.
no subject
no subject
Fortunately, the cook wasn't busy and it took only a few minutes to throw one of each dish onto a plate with sides and shove Sam back out the door again.
no subject
She even looked up when he came back.
no subject
no subject
"Root beer," was an answer she didn't even have to think about. That was a taste she knew and understood. But that Sam had noticed on some level was something that hadn't crossed her mind at all.
Not that... well. It had just been the four of them in the beginning, but with one of the others being his brother and the other being Steph who was certainly more talkative and probably more interesting, Snow had considered herself beneath notice even in so small a group.
no subject
no subject
"Thank you," Snow said very softly. And for a time she didn't say anything at all. It wasn't exactly an easy, companionable silence, but it wasn't an uneasy one, either. After a time, though, she did stop eating to ask, "What d'you think happened to him?"
no subject
"I don't know," Sam told her honestly, while pushing at his salad with his fork. He shrugged and lifted his gaze from his plate. "Could be he just went back where he came from. Or somewhere else like this. I'm gonna keep looking, but so far it doesn't seem like we're gonna find anything to say otherwise."
no subject
"I wanna go home," Snow whispered. And then she jumped, surprised as though she both couldn't believe she'd said such a thing--for a variety of reasons--and then fear as though she expected to be punished somehow for saying it.
no subject
no subject
"Gotham," Snow mumbled with an awkward, one shouldered shrug. Fear faded and embarrassment flooded in, leaving her face a bright pink.
no subject
no subject
Snow White could only shrug at that. "I think we're talkin' 'bout the same city. Same version or year, though? No clue." She took a breath before she went on, like stringing so many words together was work, and for her it probably was to some degree. "Not from there, originally. Got dragged there from 1878. I was somewhere in Montana, at the time."
no subject
no subject
"'Bout two years." Had it really been so short a time? When Snow thought of her time with Regina and Bear and Sissy and Roy and everyone else, it seemed so much longer, more vivid and colorful than the seventeen years that came before.
no subject
no subject
Snow froze. Nodded. Turned back to her food.
no subject
Poor kid.
"I get it. I won't ask anymore if you don't want to talk about it. But if you want to, or want to tell me their names so I'll know if they get here, I'll listen."
no subject
Snow went quiet again, for a long enough time that it probably seemed she wouldn't speak again at all. "Bear was the first Indian I ever met," she said in a little whisper.
no subject
"Yeah? That must've been...big."
no subject
"Yes," Snow whispered. Really, Sam probably knew more about Indians than she did, at least as far as quantifiable information. She had never known even her own mother--Gun That Sings had died giving birth to her. Bear was the first person who had ever told her--shown her--that there was no shame in being who and what she was.
And now all she had was that fucking room making fun of her. Snow folded in on herself then and went back to not speaking.
(no subject)