Kitty Pryde (
st_alksthroughwalls) wrote in
strangetrip2018-06-15 06:19 pm
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Check-In: Not-Mother Hen
Kitty sat at the bar with a cup of coffee and her notebook, watching the 'welcoming committee' make themselves busy. Liz was here, as she'd promised Kitty she would be and Kitty gave her a quick smile of encouragement.
One of the worst things about Check-In Days was that you never knew whether it'd be a whole long day of no one arriving, one spectacular fall from the ceiling and dropping dead after another, or anything in between. It made it hard to know what to do with yourself. After awhile, you got used to it and just kept on with whatever you'd do otherwise, and know that if you didn't step up for a new arrival, someone else would. But for someone not used to treating it like a responsibility to be here, especially someone with Liz's anxious need to be perfect at it, Check-In Day could be emotionally exhausting.
So Kitty made sure to have milk warmed for hot cocoa and her plans for the obstacle course handy in case Liz needed something to do with herself. Otherwise, she was working on a modification of Cerebro to see if she could start detecting new arrivals.
[ooc: Regular check-in day gathering post. If you want Kitty, ping me.]
One of the worst things about Check-In Days was that you never knew whether it'd be a whole long day of no one arriving, one spectacular fall from the ceiling and dropping dead after another, or anything in between. It made it hard to know what to do with yourself. After awhile, you got used to it and just kept on with whatever you'd do otherwise, and know that if you didn't step up for a new arrival, someone else would. But for someone not used to treating it like a responsibility to be here, especially someone with Liz's anxious need to be perfect at it, Check-In Day could be emotionally exhausting.
So Kitty made sure to have milk warmed for hot cocoa and her plans for the obstacle course handy in case Liz needed something to do with herself. Otherwise, she was working on a modification of Cerebro to see if she could start detecting new arrivals.
[ooc: Regular check-in day gathering post. If you want Kitty, ping me.]
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Where were you?"
Re: Hurley and Brad
Brad takes a moment to answer and uses looking at the placement of their tokens as an excuse.
"North of Sudbury, Ontario." He answered. "In Canada. It's like, the middle of winter there, not like it is here, and we got stranded in the woods a few days ago."
The next red token is placed beside his others. It creates three in a row.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"What, the snow strand you or something?" he asks.
Re: Hurley and Brad
He looked at the tokens for his next strategic placement.
"My, uh..." He said, visibly pausing with a deep inhale. Brad's shoulders rose and fell and his next two words came out careful like walking on ice "... My dad. He was letting me drive back home because he had been drinking. He was teaching me. But my brother Caleb was being a jerk and we started fighting and we hit a tree. Our car was stuck in the snow."
Bradley held the token between his thumb and middle finger and spun in slowly with his index.
"I came here in a different truck a few days after that." He added, then placed the red token over the black on in the middle.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"That sucks, dude," Hurley pronounces, surveying the board thoughtfully. "I kinda crashed a car before I came here, too. It's not fun."
Hurley finally places his token.
"Are you and your brother pretty close?" he asks.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Yeah" He said. "I mean, most of the time. He can be really annoying, but he's 12."
Brad shrugged. He thought Caleb was annoying a lot, but the distance had him realizing he missed his brother.
"I'm supposed to take care of him." Brad added. "I'm the oldest."
As an after thought, brad dropped a token in, trying to connect his pieces.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"I don't have any siblings, but my family's Catholic so I have about a million cousins. We were always fighting all the time. Doesn't mean we didn't take care of one another when it counted."
Re: Hurley and Brad
"I just... I never told him, you know?" He said as he turned his token over in his palm. "I should have told him more."
He dropped in his token to block off Hurley on way.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"I know it probably doesn't help now, but," Hurley slips another token in. "There's nothing stopping you from doing that when you go back,"
Re: Hurley and Brad
Brad looked at the tokens he had left over and idly counted them.
"I know," He said, selecting one. "I just hope I have the chance to tell him, that's all."
He dropped his in after careful consideration. He wondered if either of them were going to win at this point.
"How long have you been stuck here?" He asked.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Since April 1st. Probably the universe's way of letting me know this is all a big joke."
He slides in a token. The kid's actually really good.
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"I think we make our own fate," he says, thinking of Charlie. "There's nothing out there that's controlling our destiny. Just us."
He looks over at Brad.
"Why do you ask?"
Re: Hurley and Brad
He shrugged.
"You said the universe was playing a joke on you," Brad said.
He finally places his own, almost connecting 4 together.
"If there was Fate... at least stuff wouldn't be our fault," He said quietly.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"What I think," Hurley says, mindlessly placing a token somewhere that wouldn't block Brad from getting his four-in-a-row, "is that you should decide whatever you want to believe and not worry so much about what other people think. You wanna believe in fate, do it, dude."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Bradley wasn't sure if he believed in fate, or if he wanted to so then his dad wasn't as terrible a person.
He placed the token to connect his four red tokens together. I wonder if he let me win... He looked at Hurley, then he refocused on the winning tokens.
"My dad killed two people," He admitted quietly, barely over a whisper.
His expression was pained and there was a deep frown present.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"What?"
It's probably not the first thing Hurley should have said, but it's the first thing that came out of his mouth.
Re: Hurley and Brad
His gaze dropped to the table top. He loosely played with the remaining red tokens idly.
"Caleb told him we were moving to London," Brad began, "...and I guess that freaked him out and he didn't want to go back home. And there were these guys who had a radio and a truck..."
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Dude. Please tell me you were getting away from him with your brother."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Brad nodded slowly.
"Yeah... That's why I hope they're right about me not just disappearing from where I was..." He said, not looking up from the tokens on the table top.
Re: Hurley and Brad
He's pretty sure if he tried to, he'd be pretty awful at it. But that was fine; Hurley wore his heart on his sleeve anyway.
"Why was he blowing a gasket over you guys leaving?" Hurley can imagine being upset separated from his sons, but not murder two people angry.
Re: Hurley and Brad
Bradley shrugs like the teenager he is in a dismissive, but simultaneously oppressed way.
"He doesn't have custody of us. He left when my mom had me, then came back and then left..." He said with another shrug. "I guess it just freaked him out we were going so far away or.. something."
Brad didn't understand it entirely.
"He's always been kind of...intense." He added. "... Caleb always got along with him better."
Re: Hurley and Brad
"My dad left when I was like, eight and came back around when he needed something," he says, separating the tokens. "Did you not get along with your dad?" His brother getting along better with him didn't exactly say much about Brad's relationship with him.
Re: Hurley and Brad
He started to help Hurley separate the tokens.
"Mom says we're opposite sides of a coin," he said, hearing his mother's explanation while speaking. I miss my mom.... "He doesn't get things, you know? Like why I might actually like school or why I'd rather be texting my friends than on some lame trip to the middle of the woods."
Re: Hurley and Brad
That much is true.
"Does that mean your brother more of like, an outdoorsy-type person?" Since his brother and his dad seem to get along better.
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