Hat-tori
Supernova
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2009
Boring.
That was the easiest, simplist way to describe this goddam tiny hamlet he'd been transferred to. Boring. No clubs, no drugs, no gangs, no organized crime, nothing! A population smaller than his extended family, everything was miles apart, and there was almost no transit to speak of. No nightlife, either. It. Was. Boring.
Of course, the other boys in the station liked it that way. Freddy understood. It was quiet, safe, laid-back. Nice, if you liked to get paid for paperwork and saving kittens. Freddy came from New York and was transferred to Seattle before coming to this middle-eastern thorp in pubes of nowhere, and that kinda job didn't sit well with him. Sure, maybe he was a little violent, but it was a neccessary evil where he came from. Now that he was here, he felt like a pihrana in a goldfish bowl. Misplaced.
Once he'd shaved and gotten into his uniform and gear, he took one of the two patrol cars and decided, what the hell, might as well make the rounds. Maybe Ms. Goldie got lost again, bless her addled heart. Or maybe Finches got stuck in the tree? He was about ready to pound his forehead into the steering column when he saw a familiar sight.
A tagger.
They were easy to spot with a trained eye, even a block away. They thought wearing black made them inconspicous at night, even when they were painting on a brick wall. It helped, but on a night with a good moon, it made then stand out worse. He pulled over out of earshot and walked up behind the kid slowly.
"Alright, I'll be taking that can now and you'll be coming with me to the station." he said. "You picked a bad night to have fun on the town.
That was the easiest, simplist way to describe this goddam tiny hamlet he'd been transferred to. Boring. No clubs, no drugs, no gangs, no organized crime, nothing! A population smaller than his extended family, everything was miles apart, and there was almost no transit to speak of. No nightlife, either. It. Was. Boring.
Of course, the other boys in the station liked it that way. Freddy understood. It was quiet, safe, laid-back. Nice, if you liked to get paid for paperwork and saving kittens. Freddy came from New York and was transferred to Seattle before coming to this middle-eastern thorp in pubes of nowhere, and that kinda job didn't sit well with him. Sure, maybe he was a little violent, but it was a neccessary evil where he came from. Now that he was here, he felt like a pihrana in a goldfish bowl. Misplaced.
Once he'd shaved and gotten into his uniform and gear, he took one of the two patrol cars and decided, what the hell, might as well make the rounds. Maybe Ms. Goldie got lost again, bless her addled heart. Or maybe Finches got stuck in the tree? He was about ready to pound his forehead into the steering column when he saw a familiar sight.
A tagger.
They were easy to spot with a trained eye, even a block away. They thought wearing black made them inconspicous at night, even when they were painting on a brick wall. It helped, but on a night with a good moon, it made then stand out worse. He pulled over out of earshot and walked up behind the kid slowly.
"Alright, I'll be taking that can now and you'll be coming with me to the station." he said. "You picked a bad night to have fun on the town.