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applesaucedream2015-07-02 08:31 pm
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Entry tags:
- character: gabriel,
- character: greta baker,
- character: iman asadi,
- character: johnny truant,
- character: rashad durant,
- character: the balladeer,
- dropped: gus fring,
- dropped: jay merrick,
- dropped: nicholas rush,
- dropped: seth,
- dropped: the tardis,
- dropped: tim wright,
- party post,
- retired: bee,
- retired: peter vincent
Saving Lives a Mile High [open to all]

What's that? No, of course it's normal to wear spandex (or leather, for the more chic among you) and go around beating up muggers and thwarting your villainous counterparts, don't be silly. What else would you do with your afternoon, not use your superpowers to better the world? That's grossly irresponsible of you; don't you know that with great power comes great responsibility?
So get out there and make the world a better place -- and be sure not to let that disguise slip if you do make it in to work today. Wouldn't want anyone to learn your secret identity, after all.
[OOC: Characters will find themselves thrust into the role of superhero...or at least, super-powered human. Whether they'd use those powers for good or evil (or use them at all), they'll think they've always been this way (or maybe just since that time they fell in toxic waste and developed
no subject
His attempt at being tricky in his approach means they're heading back towards where he ditched the phone, and towards the bar where all of this started in the first place. At least they don't know him by name there. None of that really matters anyway now that she's got his photo, but it's something. Maybe. He picks up his pace as they reach a crosswalk, taking long quick strides. If he bolts now, he breaks his (possibly already broken) cover for sure. If she keeps tailing him for too long, the same result. How can he shake her?
no subject
Keeping up with him is probably enough, and there's nothing difficult about that particular task. Her pace has always been brisk, anyway.
"This doesn't have to be a scene," she says, not sounding menacing so much as tired, because she is, more than he probably knows. Not to be confused with 'weak' or 'defeated,' of course, more of an implied 'I could do this all day.' She could. She has. "I just want to talk."
They're rapidly approaching the bar B came from, and she gives the place a pointed look. If he's not just a tourist, this should put an end to his feigned ignorance. "Back in there, if you don't mind." Look at all this courtesy she's affording you.
no subject
In the end, though, the damage is done. She's seen his face. She knows.
His shoulders slump a little as he follows her glance towards the bar. "Fine." He'll even enter ahead of her, because honestly at this point it doesn't much matter if he turns his back on her or not. It'd be better not to show her that much fear anyway. She sounded honest enough about just wanting to talk; unfortunately, she's shattered what trust he had in her basic decency with the frighteningly prescient stalking. "But I'm not buying."
no subject
Still, she keeps a close eye on him as she heads for the bar, making sure he doesn't get any ideas about bolting. It might be unnecessarily unnerving, ordering him what he was drinking before (a tidbit picked up during previous attempts to find him), but hell if she knows what else he might like, and there are more important things to discuss than his beverage preferences. She joins him at a little table - small, but not too intimately so - sets his drink in front of him, and sits down with her whatever-the-hell-was-on-tap, which she utterly ignores.
"How the hell did you find me?" Blunt and to the point.
no subject
"...people notice when there's new heroes running around, you know," he replies after a moment. It's not a direct answer, nor is it even really to the question she asked. "I bet there's three blogs about you by now." They'll have given her a moniker. He wishes briefly that he'd looked it up; she seems like she'd be very unamused by the entire thing.
no subject
"They don't text me," she says, unamused anyway because that's her default state. "And I'd like to keep it that way." So if there's a leak, it needs to be stopped.
no subject
But they both know those aren't the people she's concerned with right now. "You said no. We could've just left it at that. I'm not a telemarketer."
no subject
The actual worst thing someone could do to her is what B is doing now, and there he sits, heaving his shoulders in a dismissive shrug, like this is nothing.
"No." Rita leans forward, her chair creaking beneath her. "We couldn't." And again, since the question obviously needs repeating: "How did you find me?"
no subject
"I might ask you the same question," he points out instead. "I'm not the one following people - though I guess that's not the right word, is it? Preceding, that's the one." If nothing else, this unwanted proximity has given him plenty of time to listen. The more he thinks about it, the more different she sounds from the way he remembers. That was only a week or so ago; what could possibly have happened in such little time?
no subject
She could tell him.
It's not without risk - he must have something going on, to have found her in the first place - but if he had a way of sussing out the extent of her powers without her telling him, he'd have done it already.
Getting here was difficult. Making sure this conversation didn't actually happen will be easy.
"You want to know how I found you?" She leans against the back of her chair and gives him a maddeningly blasé shrug of her own. See how he likes it. "Trial and error. Weeks of it." She gives that a moment to sink in, then leans forward again. "But you started this. And if you don't want me to finish it, you'll answer my goddamn question."
no subject
He knew it.
"Do you think I don't know how this works?" He leans forward to rest his elbows on the table, voice low. "I didn't do anything with you that I don't do with every half-decent vigilante in this town. My only mistake was thinking that this would be different - what can I say, I'm a sucker for do-gooders." Punch a few purse-snatchers and suddenly you must be a good person. Is he still such an easy mark after all this time?
If he didn't know better...but she wasn't sent here by any of them. He could never miss something like that. He knows their songs better than any others. "You can do whatever you want, but I'm not going to be some time looper's personal pet parrot again."
no subject
A bit much, maybe. But it's obvious that he doesn't know how this works, if his only response to being called out is a load of self-righteous whining. What, does he think none of the others whose identities he casually exposed (even if only to himself) were upset about it? Has he been taking it for granted that his dubious charm and accurate information are all it would take to win someone over?
Or has he just been lucky, up until now, because none of the others could do what she does and hold him personally accountable for his actions?
Yeah, that seems like a safe bet. She sits back and just stares at him for a moment or two, wondering how many people in his contact list are being held hostage by the implicit threat of exposure. Speaking of keeping people as fucking pets. That's his purview, and his apparent experience with other time-loopers barely registers, a fact taken in and quietly filed away while most of her focus is on not throttling him.
"I already told you I don't need an informant," she says without a trace of her former levity. And if he's been paying attention, he knows why. But just in case he hasn't, she speaks slowly and carefully, each word distinct: "What possible fucking use could I have for you?"