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SEASON 1 - The Public Library

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Joined
Nov 6, 2021
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[B][COLOR=rgb(143, 174, 112)]Character:
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Character:Randall McDougall
Time/Location:10:45am, Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status:OPEN
Tagging:Victor Simms (@Vinaein ; @Lydia ; Charlie Liddle (@Praxis) ; @whitechapel



The Dawn Chorus library. The archives more specifically. As a man who had never properly learned how to use the wonders of the Internet, it was here he found himself the day after the … occurrence. There had been nothing natural about the man who had no longer been a man that had shambled down the street, dying there like it hadn’t already been dead. Even from a distance, even as people swarmed like a fucking mob to either get a closer look or get the hell away, something had pricked inside Randall McDougal’s beer addled mind that had told him it was

Time to go home.

Only he hadn’t been able to sleep. Didn’t even know where that jackass, Frank, had gotten too and didn’t care. Rand had only a vague recollection of drinking with the other man, then an acute sense of sobriety, then his home again.

So while it wasn’t the crack of dawn when he pulled up in his pickup, parked haphazard outside the white lines of the parking spot, and walked with a similar, shambling gait as the walking dead man had done out on the street just last night, Rand made his way into the library doors and squinted into the dimmer light as the smell of well worn books greeted him.

“Musty old place. Smells like mildew,” he muttered, the complaint meant for the ghosts that no doubt haunted the aisles of shelving with their laminated and marked spines of books arraying them.

He was there for a purpose.

Blood-shot eyes and graying tufts of hair sticking up on one side of his skull, Rand approached the desk that the librarian sat behind. Male. He scoffed - librarians were meant to be snippety old women with too much puss on their face and a ruler sliding up their ass crack, not this …

“I need you to help me, son,” he grunted instead. Even with the desk separating them, he still reeked of whiskey. Still wore yesterday’s plaid, jeans and shoes that had a piece of straw clinging to them. If he had slept at all, he hadn’t bothered to change when he had gotten home. And his breakfast, from what anyone could tell, had been his usual Jim Bean special.

“I need you to find … I need you to find some old papers, articles, whatever you have. Far back as you can go. There’s something going on, see … and I need to know,” he rambled, his mouth puckered in frustration as he leaned back on his heels, glowering at the male librarian like he had said something imbecilic. When, in fact, Victor Simmons likely hadn’t said anything at all.

“I need to find proof that I’m not fucking crazy –” Rand insisted.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 10:50am | Dawn Chorus Library & Archives
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Vinaein (Victor), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie, eventually)


Cocooned deeply inside her own frustrated mind, Grace stormed through the lodge-like front doors with little attention to these familiar - although perhaps not familiar enough - surroundings. The library. Quiet, calm, predictable. A sanctuary. She always intended to make a habit of visiting more often, but her daily routine of lecturing about literature to unimpressed teenagers usually drained her motivation for extracurricular reading - or anything involving too much thought, really. Some of her colleagues went in the opposite direction, defining themselves entirely by their literary prowess, spending their summers working through endless tomes, haunting bookstores and coffee shops, spending a great deal of energy selecting glasses that bestowed an aura of wry, worldly intelligence - but still, you know, cool.

Not Grace, though she wasn't exactly proud of it. She was more Vogue than Vonnegut in her free time, and she didn't need fucking glasses, her eyes were fine.

"…There's something going on, see … and I need to know!"

As she approached the desk, the blonde's attention gradually coalesced on the older guy badgering Victor Sims. Her steps slowed to a halt, leaving plenty of space for the visitor's spite, but her keen eyes narrowed, taking a quick assessment of the man. He looked rough. But then again, so did she. Not only had she not slept, nor had she dressed beyond sweats, nor had she bothered with her hair or makeup, but she was also still reeling from her early-morning encounter with Frank.

Frank - fuck that guy, seriously. Grace absently flexed her fingers, her hand still aching. Studying the older man, she caught a whiff of alcohol, and the more incriminating details of the man's condition came into focus: the slight slur to his words, the hay stuck to his clothing, the overtly belligerent demeanor. What was it with men in this town? Just one drunk asshole after another.

Over the man's slumped shoulder, she caught the archivist's eyes, lifting a set of expressive brows in silent bewilderment. She wasn't that familiar with Victor, but their fleeting encounter at the Fall Fling had reminded her of something important - something to take her mind off of Carla and Morris and Frank and everything else: her mom's family, the Ryans. She knew almost nothing about them, despite their storied history with the town. And while she wasn't exactly brimming with good spirits or patience, doing a little family research was certainly better than pacing her cottage and mentally revisiting a hundred past calamities.

"I need to find proof that I'm not fucking crazy-"

"Good luck with that," Grace muttered, perhaps a little louder than she intended.
 
Character: Victor Simms
Time/Location: 10:50am | Dawn Chorus Library & Archives
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie,)

One of the downsides of knowing everyone in Dawn Chorus was knowing everyone in Dawn Chorus. As he made his way out from behind the paper and leather labyrinth that comprised the Library, with its voices murmuring their approval within his mind, Victor was treated to but a few brief moments of peace and quiet. Modernization had not come swift or easy to Dawn Chorus, especially not the Library, so situated was it in a copse of nurturing trees that arose all about it.

There was a pleasant canopy that blocked the sun's harshest rays, shielding the books from the ravages of time, but also casting a shadow that may or may not have always been pleasant through, lending a gloomy sensation all along the place. Sitting behind his desk, Victor's hand retrieved a cup of fresh coffee, the bitter liquid traveling through his lips to warm and wet a dry throat. He didn't really need it, but it was nice to pretend sometimes. Nice to act...

Normal.

Normal was a good thing. Normal was nice. Normal was what you aspired to, in a cookie cutter little house with a nice little family, with people you could trust and who could trust you. Not in a maze of books, the distant relatives of the enveloping trees all about them. The sigh that escaped him was accompanied by the gnawing of his teeth against the inside of his lip.

Another day. Another time for recordings. He already had the old-fashioned computer hovering upon a document, already typing the notes to print and place along their proper spots. Maybe then he could be permitted to sleep and escape the dreams that beckoned him.

Permitting himself a few minutes, he took a deeper breath, sipping the damn fine cup of coffee, when-

He recognized the man stumbling in. The older man. But then, didn't Vic recognize everyone? He had them recorded, didn't he? He knew them all.

"I need you to help me, son."

"I...I would be..." Victor began, stammering it out. Of course he would help, that's what the Archivist did. "Mr. McDougall...R-Randall, right? Please, just be careful with the books." A gentle plea as he heard the next.

"I need to find proof that I'm not fucking crazy- "

"I'm...sure we can find something or other," Victor rose in his seat, trying a smile. "Coffee?" He asked. "Why don't you tell me what's on your mind? We can find something in the archives."

He only just noticed one Grace Letts, swallowing heavil as he offered a silent plea to her not to make a scene there.

"Ah...I'll be right with you!" He said. Too much for one man to handle!

Ad yet what choice did he have? "what can I do for you, Miss Letts?"
 
Character: Randall McDougall
Time/Location: 10:55am, Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging:Victor Simms (@Vinaein ; Grace Letts @Lydia ; Charlie Liddle (@Praxis )




You either recognized Rand or you didn’t. His home had been Dawn Chorus for the last thirty years - give or take - but he also didn’t make a habit with socializing with the locals - or, well, anyone. He kept to himself until he had something to complain about. And now he had something to complain about.

Bloodshot eyes darted to the blonde, briefly. Lingering on her with a sense of familiarity that at least only went as far as knowing her from the night before; the bombshell that Frank had been sniffing after before their beer heist had turned into a binge.

Then … the events afterward that were a blur. He squinted at the woman, taking in her attire, momentarily taken away from his purpose in being at the library to begin with.

“What did you say to me?” Right. He had turned away from the male librarian sitting behind his desk and turned on Grace, the whiff of whiskey following his motions. Skunk drunk - not even hungover. Then again, he always said that the best cure for a hangover was to drink more of the cause.

Either way, the question was rhetorical. His lips moved, already slurring more words in her general direction, only once he had turned he had pivoted again, catching himself on the counter of the desk to lean on when his feet turned too cautious to hold up the rest of him. “Did you … didn’t you see what happened last night? The zombie in the street? Walking dead man? Didn’t you … you had to have seen that. Known about it at least. Right in the middle of the fucking street. That - it was dead. Not a fucking man…”

Rand was rambling, turning his squinty eyed bloodshot stare from librarian to school teacher like he expected them to be in agreement. Then continued, regardless of the outcome, this time turning his full stare on Victor. His blue eyes were watering from the lighting inside and his lips were pursed so tight it made Rand look meaner than he intended. “This has happened before, you know. The evil’s come back into this town. I need you to go dig around in your computer or some such, whatever you have to do, and find me … information. I need the proof. Articles, newspapers - they would have recorded this stuff. Not the first time people have gone missing, but … it just keeps getting blamed on something else, see. That’s not right. Whatever is out there - it’s doing this. The evil. Making people disappear. Sacrificing them. Turning them into walking dead things. It’s back, you have to understand…”

Just like that, the steam wore off. Rand puffed in a breath of air, felt it rattle around in his chest, that intense look passed back and forth to his two witnesses at the library.​
 
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 10:55am | Library Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Vinaein (Vic), @Praxis (in spirit)


The blonde took a couple steps of reflexive retreat when faced with Rand’s full, intoxication-addled attention, her expression faintly disgruntled. She hadn’t intended for the drunk to overhear her snide quip, but troublemakers often have a radar for an opportunity to make more trouble.

The last thing Grace needed this morning was another conflict, though the parallels between Rand and Frank were far more numerous and well-documented than she was capable of knowing. She attempted to amend her expression to something more open and non-confrontational - wider eyes, a benign set to her lips - but she couldn’t shake the annoyed furrow of her brow. The heavy scent of whiskey drove her back another step, and she tossed a less-than-subtle “do you believe this asshole?!” glance in Vic’s direction.

"Did you … didn't you see what happened last night? The zombie in the street? Walking dead man?”

Grace’s expression hardened again, immediately, her gaze a warning: that silent, authoritative school-teacher stare that preceded consequences.

“Didn't you … you had to have seen that. Known about it at least. Right in the middle of the fucking street. That - it was dead. Not a fucking man…"

It took everything in Grace’s power, every ounce of self-control, to not unleash all of her frustrations and fear from the prior twenty-four hours on the pathetic old drunk. He’s sick, she reminded herself, though her jaw remained clenched even after Rand precariously shifted his attention to Vic, who seemed quite nervous about this disruption of the peace in his library.

“…The evil's come back into this town…”

Rand continued his borderline hysterical tirade, and Grace endeavored to shut him out, refusing to allow that insidious nonsense into her consideration. Arms crossed tightly in front of her petite figure, she gravely shook her head.

“Look, you need to go home,” Grace snapped, oblivious to Vic’s silent plea to not make a scene. “You need to go home, get some sleep, sober up - then you’ll realize this is all ridiculous.”

She shot a glance to Vic, her voice tight: “This man doesn’t seem well. Maybe you should call someone to escort him home?”

It was ridiculous, she repeated silently to herself. All of it was delusional. Not real. This was just plain ol’ normal evil. It was. It was. A glimmer of uncertainty touched her features.
 
Character: Victor Sims
Time/Location: 10:55am | Library Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Lydia (Grace), @Praxis (in spirit)


"This is...highly irregular!" Victor stated, his chin tilted up, throat bobbing with the gulp he took. This was currently more volatile than he might like and that was disturbing him. More than a bit, he did not like disorder or chaos in the library and Mr. Randall McDougal was introducing elements he could not clearly or presently control. He didn't like that. What was more, the library might not like it either.

Rand was clearly intoxicated, rambling and mumbling while Victor tries to parse for what to say before the situation went wrong, especially with Grace Letts around. "I...walking dead in the streets you say? Now, come, sir...please, let me help you sober up and have some coffee? Maybe some pie? It always works here!" He chuckled softly...the dead walking in the streets would scarcely be unexpected or unheard of from the records. The Library was always quick to remind him of these things.

"I'll be more than HAPPY to help you, Mr. McDougall..."

It's back, he said. IT's back. What was 'it?' There was no shortage of candidates. But to expose anything could prove unwise, thought the archivist...he had to balance a great deal. His given role was neutrality and naught else. That was simply the fact of life for him."

"You need to go home, get some sleep, sober up - then you'll realize this is all ridiculous."

Grace's outburst made sense. But when she turned to him for the rest, Vic smiled gently.

"Oh, it's...not necessary yet! He's just...stressed, that's all. I'm sure there are books I could fetch to assist him...maybe..."

He faced Rand. "I'm sure there are books that could help! But please...follow protocol, my frien?" He said, attempting to keep this as relaxed as possible.

"And...for you, Miss Letts. Is there a way I might assist at the same time? I'm here to help!"
 
Character: Randall McDougall
Time/Location: 10:55am - 11:00am, Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging:Victor Simms (@Vinaein ; Grace Letts @Lydia ; Charlie Liddle (@Praxis )




They didn’t believe him. A part of him wasn’t surprised; the logical part that had kept his mouth shut for years now. Had half convinced himself that he was mistaken, everything had all been a trick from grief. His wife had died through some mishap; gone and never retrieved, just like the others. Only there was a part of Rand that had never been convinced that it was just a cold case. A part of him had never stopped believing that there would be some closure.

Not just because of Mary.

Rand lived close enough to the woods to wonder about the strangeness that seemed to blanket Dawn Chorus. Up until now, he had half believed that it was the booze showing him strange things that flitted between the branches. That it was ol’ Jameson that really heard odd things in the middle of the night, dousing his imagination in muddy interpretations of screams or howls that didn’t belong to wolves. After he had sobered up, he interpreted the weirdness as just the meanderings of an old drunk who lived close to wildlife and that sometimes the wildlife came close enough to be distracting.

People didn’t turn into trees. Or the walking dead. There were no sacrifices or witches or ancient evils lurking in the woods. All the hallucinations of his age, alcohol, and the mindlessness of grief that had never gone away. Rand was just the last to admit to himself that he was a lonely old drunk.

This man doesn’t seem well.

She hadn’t even bothered to keep that one to herself, did she? Rand scowled, turning his attention down to the desk’s countertop where he had his fists balled up. Didn’t remember balling them, either. For a minute, he found a kind of fascination in watching the color change underneath his skin - angry red to strained white - as his fingers pulsed, tigthening harder into fists.

Really, it was just a matter of time before it all boiled over. He wouldn’t hit the girl. Never had hit a woman, never would. Men didn’t do shit like that. If they did, they deserved to be strung up by their balls and have them removed.

But the nervous librarian, who offered him coffee. Pie?

Watery blue eyes jerked up, squinting mean around the edges. His jaw clenched itself hard enough that he felt his molars ground together. Rand reacted without speaking, just pulled his left arm back and lobbed it forward right over the counter. A weak punch, thrown wide, and plus he had an obstacle between him and the other man. But it was still a sucker punch, right in the mouth.

Rand probably hurt herself more than the librarian. He felt the strike through his knuckles as it vibrated all the way up his arm, making it shake as he drew back.

“I’m not ridiculous,” he snarled. “You’re all just a bunch of ignorant, blind - idiots!” This time, Rand yelled. Raised his voice to a roar and stumbled away from the information desk with his pulsing hand and good hand raised up to his temples, pressing against it as he closed his eyes and turned, heading into one of the aisles blindly. “I’ll fucking look for it myself,” he called back, snarling.
 
Character: Vic Simms
Time/Location: 10:55am - 11:00am, Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging: Randall McDougall(@pixel. ; Grace Letts @Lydia ; Charlie Liddle (@Praxis )




Pie, everyone knew, was a wonderful thing. Pie was a universal unifier. Vic had brought many a situation away from the precipice of confrontation with a good, wholesome slice of cherry pie. In fact, that was really a selling point for Dawn Chorus! There were good cherries there, good fruits out of good orchards shipped to good bakeries and combined with sugar, flour, butter and other wholesome ingredients to get a good pie. Anyone could talk things out.

It was also a simple pleasure that the Library allowed him. That and good coffee. It kept him sane, kept him focused, kept him going on. Rand was clearly having issues. Perhaps closer to the 'truth' than some may have liked. Victor would happily lend a hand how he could, but he had to handle this delicately almost like he was tiptoeing across scattered eggshells in the shape of perilous revelations.

It was a volatile situation and Grace was perhaps not helping. But everyone knew Vic to be a helpful, pleasant and friendly man. Someone was in need, Vic would help, much like Jimmy Buck (or so people thought of Jimmy Buck). It was, however, after the words from Grace that Vic realized how volatile the situation was. It just hit him then.

Or rather, Randall did. One moment Victor was standing there with a friendly smile and then hi s head had snapped back and he was going down, flat on his back, stars bursting in his vision. He tasted blood, his lip definitely cut. "Ow..." he managed, rather dazed as he scraambled up. "Um...that was...not...called for..." he managed. "Are you...alright, Miss Letts?"

He was trying to rise and failing, stumbling to fall back.

"M...Mister...Mc..." his mouth wouldn't form the words. "N-no...bad idea! Library...won' like...please, I can assist, I assure..." He was not exactly built for combat and the punch, though lacking the force it might have had, had solidly knocked him back.

What a day.
 
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 11:00am | Library Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Vinaein (Vic), @Praxis (Charlie)


The librarian may’ve been surprised by the blow, but Grace was not. She’d seen the burgeoning physical element of the conflict in the clench of the old drunk’s hands, the shaky stare of red-rimmed eyes on fists, the obvious explosiveness of temper. She’d taken another step of retreat without thinking, a reflex of her natural wariness. Fist met flesh with a dull smack, sending Victor sprawling, and instead of a gasp, she gave merely a grimly-acknowledged mutter:

“Ah, fuck.”

Why did everything have to be so fucking hard? Why couldn’t she get through a single task without things going wildly off the rails? After this, she swore silently, she would lock herself in her cottage, draw the curtains, and hide until Monday. No drunks, no favors, and no fucking evil. The blonde’s phone was already out of her pocket, and she fumbled to find the keypad.

9-1-1

"Are you...alright, Miss Letts?" the librarian stuttered, struggling to pull himself from the floor. Grace’s brows lifted in bewilderment, her attention momentarily alternating between the two men. Why was he asking her? He was the one bleeding.

"I'm not ridiculous…You're all just a bunch of ignorant, blind - idiots!" the belligerent old drunk growled, turning from the pair and shuffling off toward the stacks. Grace pressed herself back against the desk, offering him a wide berth, phone clutched in her hand and poised to dial.

The girl stared after him, her head shaking faintly after a couple beats.

"I'll fucking look for it myself!” came the subsequent snarl from their elderly pugilist.

With a resolved hardness in her eyes, Grace’s gaze returned to Victor, who was still struggling to find his composure following the blow. Sure, people were suffering. They had all kinds of personal tragedies to manage, millions of tiny struggles, monotony, restlessness, the general frustrations of life being life. It was fucking hard, but it wasn’t an excuse to be an asshole. Grace’s sympathy was well and truly exhausted, and it wasn’t even lunchtime yet.

“I’m calling the cops,” she announced flatly. Even if Victor was willing to forgive the punch, that old dude was going to hurt someone else, or most likely, himself. It wasn’t her own frustration, she told herself, but the responsible thing to do. Victor would be fine - busted lip at worst, that punch was more show than blow - but there was a non-zero chance that Randall wouldn’t be able to make it home safely on his own.

Regardless of the librarian’s wishes, Grace pressed the call button. Somewhere in the ether, an exhausted operator was alerted.

“9-1-1, what’s your emergency?”

Hearing that prompt immediately elevated her pulse, and she stood straighter, turning away from Victor to better hone her focus on relaying the proper information.

“Hi, I’m at the Dawn Chorus library and there’s a drunk elderly man here who’s behaving erratically and just punched the librarian… No, I think he’s fine, no ambulance. It’s just a busted lip… Oh, the older man? I don’t know, maybe. He seems pretty disoriented - he’s been yelling about evil in the town. I think his name is Randall?”

Here Grace turned back to Victor, catching his eye, her features arranged in curiosity, overtly seeking the librarian’s confirmation.

“Randall? Rand, yeah,” she continued, following a pause. “McDonald? McDougless? I’m not really sure.

“Okay, yeah. No, not at the moment. Okay, thanks.”

Grace ended the call, then peered cautiously over toward the direction in which Randall vanished. It was alarmingly quiet. She glanced back to Vic, a decidedly-bleak half-smile tugging at her lips.

“Fun morning, huh? Police are on their way.”
 
Character: Charlie Liddle
Time/Location: 11:15am | Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Lydia (Grace), @Vinaein (Vic)



This was good.

Normal.

Walking in and among the fine people of Dawn Chorus. Devoting her time and attention to something with a graspable solution. Shaking hands and fixing problems where she was able. A flat tire out on the interstate? Easy. More muddy foot, hand and cheek prints all over the steps to the pharmacy? Strange, but totally manageable. Foxes in the henhouse up at the Peabody farm? Charlie wasn't sure why the police were so often called about that, but ...they were, and she'd never really minded the thirty minute round trip to take the report.

An assault at the library?

Well, okay, maybe that wasn't good, or normal, but it was still within her realm on control.

"Punched the librarian", Maggie, their dispatcher, had said.

She knew Victor Simms as well as she figured she needed to, and was having a hard time rationalizing what could convince a person to toss a fist his way. If she had a nickel for every person that figured she'd have ended up there, stocking books and shushing children while her glasses slipped down the bridge of her nose, she'd have been able to finish the home renovation years ago. Sadly, the Dewey Decimal system and she hadn't ever quite clicked the way so many had presumed and it was now poor Vic left to moderate these literary scuffles.

Maybe it was better that way.

Charlie'd never been hit in the face, wasn't in a rush to have the experience, and was more than a little fine with chalking the relief she felt up to latent sexism for having let a man fill in for her on that one.

"Why?" She'd asked, already grabbing her coat. Sheriff Ryan and his cohort of chuckleheads had locked themselves in a conference room, where they'd remained most of the morning. Blinds drawn, lights dimmed, she swore she'd heard what sounded like ...giggling coming from behind the closed door more than once.

Maggie shrugged. "Said somethin' about evil. Evil towns. Leftover drunk, probably." She'd gestured with her nose to Charlie's lack of uniform. "Jeans?"

"Frank," she replied flatly, and was out the door.

The drive to the library took a grand total of eight minutes. Two of which were wasted, futzing with the battery cables on the station's oldest prowler, coaxing it to start. When it sputtered and nearly died again in the library parking lot, it hardly felt like the cavalry had arrived when all five feet and some inches of Deputy Liddle entered the scene, sans her uniform and instead festooned with a police belt that looked comically out of place where it sat low, on her hips. The weight of her pistol, handcuffs, badge and taser drug it down further, making her feel like perhaps the most pitiful interpretation of Wyatt Earp about to stand down a liquored up posse of one. She offered a meager, half-smile to Grace in passing, and followed the accusatory point of her finger toward Randall.

Cue reverb guitar, an ominous crooning whistle and one recurring, almost deafening, thought that kept playing out in her head:

Thank god it's not Frank.

"Hi, Mister Mcdougall," she said to where he faced away from her. "You wanna put the book down, come talk with me a minute?"
 
Character: Victor Simms
Time/Location: 11:00am | Library Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Lydia (Grace), @Praxis (Charlie)

"Goodness..." Victor coughed. To most people in Dawn Chorus, violence against the kind archivist would have been unthinkable. Victor was well known as a helpful soul in Dawn Chorus and there was at least an unspoken word on leaving him be. Archivist was an important job after all. The poor old Rand might have reacted without thinking and Victor could not really fault him for being just a little bit panicked. In fact, he just wanted to help.

He hated lying. And was it just him or did Grace have out a phone? With the musical trill of three notes hitting the air. His eyes widened as he raised a hand. No police, no, no. The library might not like that. "No..." he tried to slur, still weak from even that meager hit. "Not necessary...don't...."

Don't call the police! Poor old Rand didn't deserve to be harassed or thrown in jail and Victor would never cooperate with any prosecution, absolutely not. this man just needed to sober up, not be thrown away and treated like a crook or a convict! "HE's...it's...Rand, good sir, please!" He tried to yell, but not too loud. Silence in the library was a rule.

One the library liked to enforce. "Miss Letts, I must insist- " he was cut off, looking after Rand, time enough for the call...

"....Miss Letts, I understand you have the best of intent, but the police have a way of escalating situations that can be adequately handled with...just a touch of patience."

He retrieved a napkin to dab his lip quickly. It would sting, but that was about it. "Mr. McDougall, please..." he tried to hurry after him. "I can assist..."

He was caught between talking to him and Grace now, just...waiting until the police showed up. It took very little time and he was very behind schedule now.

He recognized Charlie Liddle immediately, with-

"I must insist!" Victor sounded almost frantic. "Weapons in a library?" He was terrified of this escalating soon. "I am assisting Mr. McDougall with the books he needs, Deputy Liddle, I promise that!"
 
Character: Randall McDougall
Time/Location: After 11:00am, Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging:Victor Simms (@Vinaein ; Grace Letts @Lydia ; Charlie Liddle (@Praxis )




Alcoholism was the real demon in this situation. And it was a disease. It was something that he had steeped his bones with until he could have sworn they turned to mush, and he would wake up, and he would be nothing more than a puddle of filth on the floor. Sometimes - that was exactly what he turned into, on the black out days where there was nothing but disjointed sounds and colors. He had moments of lucidity when he thought about his health, after those binges, after he would stumble into the woods that haunted his imagination and kept him clinging to nostalgia.

It was the wound that would not heal. He kept picking it open instead of letting it heal over. Scar tissue was better than the festering mess he had made of himself as the years carried him away, blurry. Insignifiant. He had wasted his whole fucking life, it felt like - some days.

This was one of those days. He hadn’t slept. His liver was getting him in the ass. He drank to numb the pain of his own mortality. The splitting headache that he would have, later - that was nothing in comparison to looking at himself in a mirror that did not just reflect back his old, wrinkled face. The reflection would yawn on and on, right back at him, reminding him of one thing:

Randall McDougall was an old fucking man who had done nothing in his retirement that was useful, or helpful, and it would make him even more bitter for it.

He hated to look at himself.

He hated when other people looked at him like that. Like the blonde, Grace. Like the squirrelly librarian, too fucking chipper to wear that grin on his face. It was why he had punched the mug and hadn’t thought twice about it. At this juncture, there were no consequences.

So when he stormed off, huffing air like stomping around on mildew carpet in books that smelled like books but also too many fingers, he did so blind. He didn’t know where to actually start looking. True Crime? That was where he had landed, grabbing something - anything - off the shelf like it gave him a fucking reason to be in the library.

Ann Rule it was. Something about Ted Bundy. Nothing about Dawn Chorus. He would actually need to go into the archives for something relevant, but instead he had punched the fucking librarian in the face.

Because he was offered pie and coffee.

Among the high shelves, Rand still heard them. Or at least, the shrill, stumbling voice of the librarian. He imagined the condescension and mockery from Grace and made it true, with a sneer on his face. Fumbling with the book that he wasn’t really reading, he almost ripped a page out with how bad his fingers were shaking.

Anger or something else - probably a bit of both.

If that fucking librarian came back to where he was, Rand was going to punch him in the face again. This time hard enough to knock him right on his pansy ass, just to teach him to grow a better pair of balls.

Then he heard a new voice, accompanied by the frenzied one of Victor. The other man he ignored. His head snapped up to peer at the head that came into view around the corner, silhouetted at the start of the stacks Randall stood in.

The cop girl. Prissy Liddle.

His jaw tightened, the Ann Rule held closer to himself as if it were precious, when he knew for a fact that it was speculative trash. But he had to get defensive about something, otherwise what the fuck was he really doing here?

“Go away, I didn’t do anything wrong. Stop harassing me. I’m just here doing research,” he snapped in a gravel coated voice. Crunched all his words together, but at least it was better than letting them slide around as he slurred. Instinctively, Rand took a step back. Then, finding a new purpose, he turned on his heel and walked down the stack, opposite direction of where the Prissy Liddle and the librarian were, mumbling to himself about needing to find some actual research.

“Fucking idiots. No one can see what’s right in front of them. Calling me crazy, calling a fucking little girl…”

Something clicked - probably - because Rand stopped in the next row of shelves over, jaw working like it was his brain. Watery blue eyes stared forward at the book spine in front of him, but didn’t see it. He was processing something. A memory, blotted out and jumbled.

Abruptly, he turned back around, stalking on unsteady feet back towards Charlie Liddle. “You,” he jabbed his finger in the air right at her, his other still holding his Ann Rule to his chest. “You saw it. Tell these idiots what you saw.”
 
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 11:15am | Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Vinaein (Vic), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie)


One of the best feelings in the world? When your problem becomes someone else’s problem.

It’s wasn’t that the old drunk was Grace’s problem, per se, but sometimes the universe drops a problem right in front of you at the library’s main circulation desk and makes it your problem. Similarly, Grace didn’t want to create problems for Charlie or the rest of the DCPD (although Charlie was the only officer she knew, and fortuitously the one who arrived), but they had the authority to settle the matter. To fix the problem. To give the problem a ride home and sober the problem up.

Otherwise you have to punch the problem in the face, or, alternatively, it may punch you. Grace had seen both scenarios already this morning, and it was only - she glanced at her watch - 11:15. Not even lunchtime.

It felt so much later.

Anyway, a small, relieved smile lightened Grace’s features as Charlie arrived, and she wordlessly pointed the officer to the stacks where Rand vanished, even as Victor began to protest the official intervention. It struck her as odd that Charlie was out of uniform, but given the prior night’s events, uniforms were probably the least of their worries.

Grace turned to Victor as Charlie pursued Rand, her relief evident.

“Mr. Simms,” she began, authoritative and assuring, despite her disheveled appearance, half-leaning on the desk. “Charlie’s not going to hurt that guy. She’s just going to help him figure out how to get home and sober up. He doesn’t need a book or information or coffee from the library, he needs help.”

The blonde paused, listening for the removed murmurings of a problem being solved. The old man’s desperation, his confusion and delusion and fear - those weren’t things to indulge. She knew all too well.

Grace cleared her throat, forced a renewal of her own meager poise, and smiled anew.

“So, Mr. Simms, I was wondering if you could help me find information on the Ryan Family here in Dawn Chorus. Birth certificates, census records, stuff like that. I’ve heard them referenced here and there, but I just…”

She paused, the lingering memory of her mother’s resolute secrecy encouraging her cautious advance.

“… I just wanted to know more about them, I guess.”
 
Character: Charlie Liddle
Time/Location: 11:15am | Library aisles
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Rand), @Lydia (Grace), @Vinaein (Vic)


Charlie kept her distance, allowing him his space and the comfort of that book he was clutching. There was no sense in escalating a situation that'd already started to boil over. Vic would live, and while she didn't think him the type to suddenly whirl around on his principles, and decide to press charges, her first point of action was getting Mr. McDougall out of the library and into some fresh air. Looking at him, she guessed he hadn't slept, nor eaten, nor looked in a mirror for maybe longer than a few seconds. Something had latched onto his attention and brought him here. Charlie recognized fixation well enough to know alcohol – while excellent fuel for the fire – was only half the problem.

When he jabbed his finger at her and began making demands, she stood her ground. "I..." whatever she'd had at the ready to say, stalled, caught in her throat and came out in a shapeless non-word. She shook her head, "We can talk about that: outside." She could hear Grace coaxing Vic's attention away from them and dared a step toward Randall.

"Look," she said, eyes very stern from beneath where her lenses were slightly fogged, "I can't just let'cha stay here. You attacked Mr. Simms," she readied herself for a barrage of scoffing and denial – a reflex from too many arguments with her brother where she'd made the mistake of using the wrong terminology, thus dismantling her argument in his eyes – but it never came. "You're lucky he doesn't make a fuss. And since he's not, both of us are gonna walk out of here, go outside, 'n talk. Just you'n me, okay? I ain't gonna put'cha in cuffs, and you're gonna come along: nice 'n easy."

Pretty convincing right? Every foot and spare inch of her worked up to the perfect, stern little frown. She thought, briefly, how one of the other officers might've dealt with him. Shouting, probably. Lotta that. Shoving, and tasing; books and their aisles sent to the floor while Grace and Vic and whoever else might've been out there considered how best to handle policing the police. Another call to dispatch would follow -- this one from when the altercation invariably spilled into the streets. More scuffling. Swearing. Bloody noses, black eyes and maybe even a broken bone to complete the trifecta.

There was no need for that. He just needed a minute and to maybe sleep for ten, twelve, or nineteen hours. She'd seen it before and, unless fate suddenly felt like dealing her a different hand, would see it again. And again. And again...

"So, go 'head and put the book down, and come with me. Deal?"
 
Character: Victor Simms
Time/Location: 11:15am | Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Praxis (Charlie), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie)

Victor was now caught between two problems. His own and someone else's Charlie Liddle did not seem inclined to let this matter go and making it eve worse, Rand was clutching a book with a grip of steel, which indicated he would not quickly relinquish it. Which meant the library might not like that fact. His breathing quickened, a sense of fear coming to his eyes as he tried to focus his mind where it needed to be. "Officer Liddle, please just let me..." He said, before Grace was speaking...asking him...

He couldn't well resist, could he? Being the archivist meant he was bound to answer, in spite of what he might wish. He could hear Charlie saying Randall had attacked Victor, which was true, but even then, he hardly wanted the man hurt because of it....

But he was compelled to stare at Grace, with his customary pleasant and helpful smile, his lip torn. But at least the bleeding had stopped. He was patting his head to remove any lingering hints of sweat. "Miss...Miss Letts. Please forgive me for...the brief delay, I hardly desire any unpleasantness here!"

Nor would the Library and it had its ways of lashing out when it was not pleased, as Vic had learned to his detriment many a time. "Yes....he does need help, of course. As for your request..." He smiled and turned back to the library. "I...do indeed know where the Ryan Family sction is located...might I ask what piqued your interest, Ms. Letts?"

He beckoned her to follow him down a voluminous corridor, lined high with books and ledgers, like paper teeth all about them.

"Roberts...Roxton...Ryan!" He reached the volume.

"Might I ask which specific family members...?"
 
Character: Randall McDougall
Time/Location: 11:15am to 11:20am | Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging: Charlie Liddle (@Praxis), Victor Simms (@Vinaein), Grace Letts (@Lydia)


His world had been whittled down to just him and her in that aisle. The blondie and librarian were out of sight, out of mine as far as Rand was concerned. Different conflicts wrote and re-wrote themselves across his features, drawing lines and crinkles where there had been none before and then smoothing back out as the next thought passed across his face. At one point, the burning defense in his stare dropped down to the book in his hand. His hand shook as he studied the cover and its too big font, the protective sheet covering the jacket around the hardcover, yet the copy was still worn with time and use.

At last, pride stole the day and settled in like molded clay on his face. Upper lip trembling, he looked back up at Charlie Liddle and saw her for what she really was: an officer of the law. Called on to take care of a problem. Him.

The old man had a moment of lucidity then as the realization of what he had just done struck him. Yet the shame and fear that flickered in his eyes shuttered almost immediately, turning stubborn and hard as his jaw. He wouldn’t argue, but he wasn’t going to admit that he had done anything wrong, either.

Coffee and pie.

Randall McDougall scoffed, shook his head in a way that could have meant anything, and walked back down the book lined shelves towards the woman who was looking at him like he was a rabid dog ready to bite her hand off if she reached out any more than she already had.

“Have to check out my book first,” he informed her. Voice gruff and unbudging. The look in his stare said the things that his mouth didn’t, Let me have this if you want me to come quietly.

Then, bleary eyed but with less of a stumble in his step, Rand walked right past her, still holding the book clutched in both hands, while his other wished out his wallet from his back pocket. His fingers still shook as they dug, blindly, for the piece of embellished plastic that he approached the desk with. Not looking at either Grace or directly at the librarian he had punched, he tossed down his library card, scowling at nothing.

“I’m checking this book out,” he grated out, roughly. Then he slid the book across the counter, a challenge gleaming in his eye at both Grace and Victor, as if he were daring them to contradict his change in action.
 
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 11:20am | Archives & Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Vinaein (Vic), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie)


A relative peace descended as Charlie quietly corralled the old drunk among the library’s towering shelves. In simple defiance of the town’s prowling, effusive not-rightness, Grace endeavored to ignore the Archivist’s bloodied, busted lip. It wasn’t quite as bad as Frank’s face, and an astronomical improvement over Blevins.

There it was, suddenly large in her mind despite her efforts, that face, its memory like a physical blow. No, focus - there are things happening here, now: normal things. Things she’d meant to do for a while, before anyone went missing.

“I hardly desire any unpleasantness here!” Victor was saying, and she dipped her sharp chin in a reflexive nod. No more unpleasantness.

Grace followed a couple steps behind as the archivist wandered into the thick of the records, “Well, the Ryans are actually my mother’s family. She moved away to go to college and they drifted apart.”

A brief, reflective pause followed. It wasn’t quite the truth. While she never shared the whole story, Grace had the distinct impression that her mother’s estrangement had been less of a “drift” and more of a “severing.” These were details whose absence left large holes in her history and sense of self. Had her mother left her kin, or had her kin rejected her? What transgression could be so serious that the family fallout would last decades, then be bequeathed to Grace when she chose to start anew in Dawn Chorus? Her mother hadn’t spoken to her in over a year now.

“My mother’s name is Tabitha Ryan. She never talked much about her family, but I think she had a couple of siblings.”

She took the offered ledger, following him back to the circulation desk. It looked plain, official, hardly meriting the rush of excitement that quickened her heart. Once opened, she flipped through the pages until she came to records from the previous generation. A prim finger guided her gaze down the page until it settled on the appropriate arrangement of letters.

There it was, black and white: Tabitha Ryan. Born 1964. No mention of a marriage or children.

But the siblings - Grace gasped aloud at the sheer number of names.

“Stanley and Harriet Ryan… I guess those were my grandparents. They had-” she paused to count, “ - fifteen children?”

“Holy shit,” Grace whispered, too quietly to offend anyone within earshot, save perhaps Victor. “My mom was the thirteenth child. And most of her siblings had kids. I have… a lot of cousins.”

Her eyes roamed the names, searching for anyone familiar. “Amanda Miller - she works at the school with me. Sheriff Ryan? Wow, he’s my first cousin. I figured we were related, I just didn’t know how. It seems like half the town.”

A pair of vibrant green eyes fixed intently on the archivist. “Can I make a copy of this?”

At that moment, Rand lumbered back up to the desk, and seeing his subdued manner, Grace offered the slightest nod and glanced toward Charlie. It seemed she had everything under control.

Not wanting to threaten an acceptable resolution, Grace quietly turned her attention back to the record book.
 
Character: Victor Simms
Time/Location: 11:20am | Archives & Main Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Lydia (Grace), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie)

Victor, most days, liked peace and quiet in the library. That was what a library was for, after all; a place where people could come to find a paper and leatherbound sanctuary, free of the hustles and bustles of the outside world. A place, it must be stressed, of peace and quiet. Being punched in the face ad having the police arrive did put something of a damper on that.

And the Library didn't like it. Victor could feel that in his very bones. Charlie, at least, seemed to have old Rand well in hand for the moment without escalating the situation and Vic was given a moment to dab at his face with a kerchief he kept in his pocket. Cleaning himself up, he sighed heavily, clearing his throat as he focused back upon Grace with the archivist smile. His eyes were bright, friendly and helpful.

He was everything the Library demanded of him. "Ah, yes, indeed!" He recalled the records, knowing Grace's maternal descent from the Ryan family (after all, Vic knew just about everything about people's descent in Dawn Chorus from the way the records worked).

People came to him with these issues, to reconnect with their roots like he was the gardener helping to plant them anew. His tongue clicking against the room of his mouth. "Tabitha Ryan..." He said as she took the ledger, tasting the name and drumming his finger upon a shelf as he left her to examine it.

He supposed this must have been a shock indeed, her eyes roaming the page as he tried to be helpful. "Is this a joyous occasion, I hope, Ms. Letts? To find out you have so many family?" He pressed delicately. "I have no objections if you make a copy, I dearly hope it assists! I just need to know the purpose!"

The Library did insist on that much at least. "The records likely cover your extended kin as well...if you wish to examine more?"
 
Character: Charlie Liddle
Time/Location: 11:30am | Library Front Desk, Downtown Dawn Chorus
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @pixel. (Randall McDMcdougall), @Lydia (Grace Letts), @Vinaein (Victor Simms)


Charlie only stood in tight-lipped silence while Rand finished his business at the front desk. She'd offered Grace a plain, half-smile that apologized more than it did anything. Sorry, about that, it said. I know you're newer in town and this, along with everything else, has probably left a bad taste in your mouth. Sorry that I never made the effort to introduce myself when I know you saw me see you jogging. Sorry, that I can't seem to remember your last name right now. Sorry, about the dead man in the street and sorry, really, that everything ugly and profane decided to wake up to greet you at the door.

Had she been aware of Frank's contribution to her morning, perhaps even big sorries wouldn't make up for that Liddle disaster.

She exhaled, shifted her weight from one foot to the other and grabbed – albeit softly – at Rand's elbow as he looked to be finishing. "Come on," she said to him and his book, keeping his pace before hers as they moved toward the exit. Already shaking her head by the time they'd made it to the entry, she did her best to keep any thoughts from spilling out until they were well out of earshot. When she did circle around to face him, she was still eyeing him with that same stern, perhaps disappointed, frown.

"Honest to goodness, Mr. McDougall, I don't understand." She wondered if he even recalled their brief encounter from the previous night; his and her brother's jabbering and the waterfall of beer down her front. Mostly, she wondered if there was any recollection rattling about in there for anything that wasn't his most current fascination. His entire expression had seemed to shift some, and perhaps it was for this that Charlie found the required indignation to continue. "Hittin' people? Victor Simms? That man never hurt a hair on anyone's head, and you go in there 'n slug him? Come on!" She said again, tugging at the sleeve of his coat. "It's cold out here, and if we're fixin' to talk, then we'll do it where it's warm."

The interior of the prowler wasn't much better, but at least it was away from the constant, distant, hammering of nails and the bluster of a wind colder than Charlie could remember for this time of year. They sat, she in the front and he in the back, for a moment in silence before she attempted to start the engine. It fizzled once, then again before starting.

Her eyes found his via the rearview, "Honest to goodness, Mr. McDougall," she repeated, "I just don't understand ya'll. I know you know my brother, and I know you've seen what a fool he makes of himself sometimes. Maybe you can tell me a 'lil about it, huh? What makes ya'll think the world owes you somethin', and that if you ain't getting' it, it's time to start throwin' fists?" Her pitch was climbing, quickly, and the lids of her eyes were fluttering, clenching, narrowing her eyes to slits. Rand didn't need to be facing her to know she was working herself up to something, and that he might've had very little to do with it all said and done.

The engine sputtered, threatening to die if they idled too long.

Somehow, Charlie caught herself, and replaced whatever might have followed with another slow exhale. Not asking, she shifted the prowler into drive and pulled through an empty space. "I can't let'cha stay here." A turn onto Primrose, "Can't just drop you off any ol' place; liable to hit someone again." Another turn and a red light, this time on Chorus Avenue. Charlie kept her foot on the accelerator while they idled. "So, you're comin' with me," eyes to the rearview, "jus' for a bit. Jus' so I know you ain't out there pickin' more fights I'll have to clean up." She waved, mostly on instinct, to a pedestrian who seemed more concerned with the man sitting behind her. "Won't be so bad – the guys usually take in from Palmeri's on Monday. Sandwiches. I bet we can get'cha some lunch if we hurry. So, it'll be quiet, ain't nobody gonna bother ya, 'n I'll come check on ya later. You can ask me any question you want then, okay? Can't promise I'll have'n answer for ya."

Another half block crawled by before she spoke again. "Y'know, I don't think you were really mad at Mr. Simms back there. Or me. Or anyone else you might'a squared up against this mornin'." She made sure his own, watery stare fixed on her before continuing, "I think you're scared. I think you're scared, and mad, and confused that..." her mouth had suddenly become very dry, "that ...someone's comin' into our home and takin' us. Takin' us 'n hurtin' us, and there ain't a thing nobody can do about it." Grateful, then, that Rand couldn't see where her own bottom lip was teetering toward a frown of anguish, she kept speaking even if the tremble of her voice forfeited too much. "You 'n me have lived here a long time, Mr. McDougall. Our whole lives, maybe. My whole life ...not sure about you, I guess." She was beyond caring if he was even listening. The words were flowing, and Charlie was powerless to stop them.

"Maybe you don't remember, but you told me somethin' once – about bein' scared. I must'a been ...six or seven; real young, 'n my dad and me were at the vet. Back when that white-haired fella ran the place, so it must'a been a real long time ago. We had this dog, Bobo, and she was havin' surgery, and I was cryin' and cryin' in the waitin' room." She laughed, softly, at her own memory. "My dad must'a been talkin' to the doctor or somethin', cuz I remember I was sittin' there, alone, cryin' buttermilk, when I saw you and your cat." She glanced at him for any sign of recognition, "and you asked me why I was cryin'. I said that I was scared that Bobo was scared too, and that she'd hate me for lettin' 'em take her."

Another red light at Hopewell St. This one taking close to an eternity to let no one through.

"And you said to me, that they don't get scared the same way we do. That as long as I was there for her, when she came back, that she'd stop bein' scared and forget all about that place." She was peering at him through the rearview with this strange blend of nostalgia and vulnerability that lasted just long enough for the light to turn green. "Maybe you don't remember that," she murmured, more to herself than to him. "But I do."

They were nearing the intersection with Netherland Avenue. Cleanup from the previous night was underway; the section of street where Morris had collapsed still taped off. Even without it, nobody seemed too curious, and had given the area and most of that block a wide berth all morning.

"So?" She asked, her tone nowhere as slanted against him as it had been. "You gonna come on back to the station? Or is there still somethin' out there that needs doin'? I can't promise the next time we get called, you'll get such a fair deal."
 
Character: Randall McDougall
Time/Location: 11:15am to 11:20am | Dawn Chorus Library
Scene Status: OPEN
Tagging: Charlie Liddle (@Praxis ), Victor Simms (@Vinaein ), Grace Letts (@Lydia )


Ignored, mostly. He got the side eye from the pretty blonde when he dropped the book on the desk, interrupting the flow of conversation between her and the librarian for a couple of awkward moments before the prissy cop swooped in to save them from him. That was OK. He ignored them, too, with a furrowed frown on his face, before his anxious foot shifting got the best of him and he finally scooped his book back up whether it was officially checked out in the system or not.

No doubt the librarian was still pissy about the sucker punch. Shouldn’t have offered pie - was what he wanted to say, instead of nothing at all except for a grunt under his breath and rolled shoulders in response to the little woman cop settling her hand on his elbow as if he couldn’t shake her right off if he wanted to. He almost did, actually. Still had some dignity, despite his swaying and stale beer breath tinged with the more pungent bite of fresh whiskey. The latter was something he would deny until he was out of breath. Just his aftershave; he liked the smell of Jack in the morning. What’s a little nip of something in his coffee to help cure a hangover, anyway? The red eyes were just because he didn’t sleep. How could anyone, after what had happened?

So he grumbled at the Liddle sister, but still pivoted on his heel with a glaring look at Grace and Vic as his method of saying goodbye, before trudging back out into the too bright sun, a book tucked under his arm and his arm stiff underneath the touch of Charlie’s hand that guided him out there. Kept his stare forward. His jaw set in its own stubborn pride. Not even acknowledging that he had done anything wrong, but he also didn’t complain just yet that he hadn’t gotten what he had set out to do either.

“He offered me pie,” came Rand’s grumbled retort when she had paused. This time his head swiveled and took her in, disbelieving, but also a hint of smugness in his own defense of the situation. He chuckled, deep and rumbling, as he stepped out into the chill and finally shook himself free, walking on his own accord to the car like it had always been his intention to crawl into the backseat of a police cruiser. Like this was all just part of this morning’s plan. “Plus, even you gotta admit the look on his face was priceless. Like he’d never been kissed with a pair of knuckles. That man probably has never been kissed at all, ever. No spine or gumption. What he needs is an actual smack down or situation where his life’s been put in perspective, then he’ll probably have a different outlook on hospitality.”

But she hadn’t been there yet. Only Grace. Except Rand sounded lucid enough, even reasonable, with the way he was explaining the situation. There was only a slight slur to his words, as he made himself comfortable in the backseat of the cruiser. Even took the time to fasten his seat belt.

He was still guffawing to himself, softly, as if sharing an inside joke with just himself, as the car kicked into gear and they started driving.

“I think more people could do with some good old fashioned whooping. That’s probably the problem with Frank, you know. Your daddy ever spank either of you two? Millennial kids don’t get spanked anymore. If my Pa caught me doing half the shit that boy pulls, I would have been cuffed so bad I wouldn’t be able to do my schoolwork because of two black eyes. Set me fuckin’ straight. No discipline in your generation is the problem. Think you can just do whatever the hell you want. Don’t even care that the whole world’s gone to shit.”

He fell silent after that, picking up the drone of her own voice. She was speaking to him, back there in his seat, with his head lolled back and eyes closing. Some of the purpose had drained from him and exhaustion played across his features, turning him more rugged. Hard. But with bags under his eyes. He tuned in, picked up what she was saying, even though he had missed some of it. A lot of it.

“What are you prattling about, Charlie Liddle?” He paused, the tight frown on his face loosening a little. His chest rose and fell, heaving out a sigh. “Wasn’t my cat,” he finally mumbled. “Was my wife’s.”

His eyes were open again at least, fixed on her stare from where it kept glancing at him in the rear view mirror. Something that might have been a memory flickered in his eyes as she told her story, reminiscing. Reminded him of his age and all that time he’d wasted in between.

“The cops back then never found my wife’s body, you know. Back then, six people disappeared instead of just four. Want to know how they found the bodies that did turn up?” Deadpan. No sign of the drunk in his words, in his face, in his eyes. There was a sharpness that surrounded the old man as he stared at Charlie Liddle as they drove closer to the police station. “Because I think Blevins managed to escape before whatever is out there was done with him. Forgot that he was already dead and shambled on up thinking he could help those others, then finished dying out there in the street, like his soul was finally cut and he could really die. I think this town needs to re-evaluate how we’re thinking and going about all this, Liddle, if it doesn’t want something worse waking up and coming to town.”


Then he was settling back, content to let her drive him where she would, the earlier fight drained from him.​
 
Character: Grace Letts
Time/Location: 11:20 | Main Circulation Desk
Scene Status: Open
Tagging: @Vinaein (Vic), @pixel. (Rand), @Praxis (Charlie)


Though perhaps an acceptable - even ideal under the circumstances - resolution, the wake of the assault blanketed the circulation desk with quiet awkwardness. As Rand briefly and necessarily consulted with his victim about checking out his book, Grace caught Charlie's apologetic smile and reflexively returned one in unspoken commiseration. Sorry about that, it said. Sorry I probably made your morning more difficult by calling this guy in, and now you're stuck dealing with him from here on out. Sorry this is probably the very last thing you need, with the missing people and the trainwreck of a vigil last night. Sorry about the dead man in the street. And sorry, really, that I saw you kneeling over him and you're probably getting even less sleep than I am.

Had she been aware of Charlie's relation to Frank, perhaps a bigger, more pronounced sorry-for-having-to-deal-with-that-level-of-fucked-up-in-your-personal-life may have been appropriate. Sorry you're stuck when I could just run away. Sorry I punched your brother, or rather, sorry I had to punch your brother.

She watched them exit, dazed with her own thoughts, before returning her attention to the impressively-professional archivist.

"A joyous occasion?" she repeated, her brows lifting in surprise at the question. Not surprised that he asked, but surprised that she didn't immediately have an answer for him. On one hand, she found exactly what she was looking for, which was undoubtedly positive. On the other, the realization of just how much her mother had concealed about her family was difficult to contextualize. If it was all joyous, why the secrecy? Something didn't feel right.

But the archivist was just being polite, and she didn't need to burden him with all that.

"Yes, of course, very joyous!" she said quickly, with as much brightness as she could scrape into the disparate pieces of her face. Wider eyes, a too-wide smile. A quick nod of her sharp chin. "I just want the copy to remember who's who - for when I get in touch with them."

She scanned the names again, her smile fading in consideration.

"I think this is good for now. I might come back later, but this is definitely enough to keep me busy for a while." How she'd be busy with the names - what she'd do with them, whether or not she'd actually reach out - was something she still hadn't decided.

"I really appreciate all your help today, Mr. Simms," she paused, studying his bruised face as she folded the copy of the birth records. "And sorry about the mess with Mr. McDouglas. I know that's probably not something you see everyday." After the prior few days, her platitude rang hollow, even to herself.

"Anyway," she concluded before edging away from the desk, "Appreciate the help, again. Take care!"

And with her too-bright voice still echoing in the rafters of the Dawn Chorus Library, Grace hurried out, eager to return to the familiar comfort of her little blue cottage, determined to keep only her own company until Monday thrust her back into the classroom and staring into those expectant, confused teenage faces.
 
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