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
"All the time," Hurley says. "But wishing for it's not going to change anything. Life's not gonna stop just 'cause I want it to."
Hurley takes one of the tokens in hand and taps it against the table. "But that stuff? It's not easy to do. I still freak out all the time."
Re: Hurley and Brad
"What do you mean, freak out?" He asked.
Bradley couldn't picture an adult freaking out except for the way his dad did. Bradley didn't think most people freaked out the same way as his dad did.
Re: Hurley and Brad
Which is probably true, but then there was explaining it all.
"So I won the lotto," he says. "Mega Lotto Jackpot. I did it with some numbers this guy in the hospital kept repeating over and over again. And after I won the lotto, all these bad things started happening to basically everyone and everything around me. So I fired the two cooks that worked for me. Gave them severance. Right in the middle of dinner."
It had been nice severance, but... still, that was how Hurley freaked out that time.
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Oh..." He said, thoughtful. "...but you let them go because bad things were probably going to happen to them too, right?"
Brad considered it more.
"I think you did the right thing." He concluded. "The right thing, even."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Sometimes... your parents don't know what's best for you," He said, thinking of his father. Mom let us stay with him, too.... "Are you still cursed here?"
Re: Hurley and Brad
A beat.
"But you're probably right about the parents thing. I'm sure my Ma meant well inviting my dad back and trying to convince me I was wrong about the cursed stuff, but it didn't help."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Or maybe you being here is the biggest curse of all
Bradley placed another token. He wasn't sure there would be a winner this time. There weren't that many spaces left and they were running out of tokens.
"Thanks..." He said after a minute. "For, trying to make this place seem a little normal."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Re: Hurley and Brad
He shook his head.
"Not yet.. " He said. "I guess I'll have to figure that out too... any suggestions?"
Re: Hurley and Brad
That was where Hurley started when he was trying to figure out something to do.
Re: Hurley and Brad
Brady had to think about the question.
"...French?" He said, dumbly. "And hockey."
Two things that aren't really helpful here, probably
Re: Hurley and Brad
Re: Hurley and Brad
"Pretty good, I guess?" He said, never the one to feel confident about his skills. "I'm in French immersion, so half my classes are French."
Brad thought about it.
"Yeah, sure." He said with a nod. "I could definitely do that for you."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Another token goes in.
"What's your room number again? I'll drop the book off after my shift."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Bradley placed his last token in. He looked at the pattern. Was there a winner?
"105," He answered. "And... thanks."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Which is why there isn't a winner, just a couple of close calls.
"Hey, no problem."
Hurley presses the little latch again, then starts throwing the tokens and pieces back into the box. "You think you can hang onto this for me for awhile?" he asks, tapping the lid of the box. "I gotta head to my shift."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Brad looked surprised. Then he nodded.
"Yeah, sure." He said while helping by dismantling the two side pieces that keep the yellow part up. "I'll keep it safe."
Re: Hurley and Brad
Even Hurley was starting to tire of it.
And with one final smile, Hurley lumbers off to the cafe.