ext_146728 (
tunafish.livejournal.com) wrote in
circle72010-03-06 10:20 pm
Entry tags:
Beam me up, Scotty!
The warehouse reeked of gunpowder and rusted metal. The air was coarse with smoke, difficult to breathe in, and the floor was littered with freshly dead bodies. Even the old man, a veteran when it came dealing in this kind of business, the scene was a gloomy sight to behold. He bats an eye, a quick glance over the place was enough to tell him the place had been deserted – that is, abandoned by the ones that weren’t so unfortunate. Well, for the most part, it doesn't seem like anyone's lurking around in the shadows trying to get a last strike. His shoulders fall into a relaxed position and he stows his gun in its holder.
Garamond wasn’t typically one to initiate turf wars, but he didn’t refuse a fight when his establishment was threatened. After a short inspection of the area, he was quickly coming to realize their rival gang had been sitting on a little gold mine. The warehouse was filled with all sorts of investments. Raw materials, drugs, weapons, typical stuff for small organized crime groups– but what mattered is that they had a lot of it. ‘Finder’s keepers,’ he supposed. He scoops up a crowbar from the ground beneath him, glancing out towards the row of crates to his front. He lodges the bar's teeth into the upper-latch of the nearest crate and he gives a shove--
The top of the crate goes flying, hitting the horizontal wall with a clatter. Turns out the thing wasn't even bolted down.
"Huh."
Garamond wasn’t typically one to initiate turf wars, but he didn’t refuse a fight when his establishment was threatened. After a short inspection of the area, he was quickly coming to realize their rival gang had been sitting on a little gold mine. The warehouse was filled with all sorts of investments. Raw materials, drugs, weapons, typical stuff for small organized crime groups– but what mattered is that they had a lot of it. ‘Finder’s keepers,’ he supposed. He scoops up a crowbar from the ground beneath him, glancing out towards the row of crates to his front. He lodges the bar's teeth into the upper-latch of the nearest crate and he gives a shove--
The top of the crate goes flying, hitting the horizontal wall with a clatter. Turns out the thing wasn't even bolted down.
"Huh."

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The older man takes a step over towards the neighboring box, kneeling forward with curiosity. He takes the way the boy is clutching his side to mean that the kids still bleeding. He assumed it must be a deep wound, considering the amount of time that had passed since the grounds had been cleared. The kid was looking in poor shape. He crouches in front of the box, leveling himself with the boy huddled in the corner. “You going to make it down there?” He asks, a serious question, despite a glimmer of a smirk on his face.
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In the meantime, the question directed at him seems to wake Evan up, and he cracks open his eyes, turning slowly to the stranger. The light behind the large silhouette is blinding, and he winces at first. "¿Quién es el hombre? ¿Un enemigo? ¿Quiere matarnos?" It is foreign in tongue, evidence of their upbringing. Only in the niches of the ghettos and slums did the old ununified dialects still persist, passed down from parents to children. Often, the single family would be the only ones in the entire neighborhood to understand it.
By then, Viana manages to get back to her feet. "I don't think so," she answers, more understandably. She eyes Garamond suspiciously, but not entirely as antagonistically as before. "My brother is hurt," she tells him. "Can you help us?"
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“Here,” He untucks his scarf from his coat collar, handing it over to the two. “Wrap up with this until we get out of the warehouse. I’ll call in a few men to help you kids out.”
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In a matter of seconds, she pulls on the knot, testing it. Evan mutters out something under his breath that sounds suspiciously like, "Can't...breathe..." but it's hard to say from either of the other two vantage points. Viana pulls him up by the arm, too small yet to take his weight. Luckily, the boy seems to be able to manage that much, and he stumbles to his feet, blinking slowly at Garamond now that his eyes aren't too busy readjusting to the light.
"Thank you," he says.
"Lead the way," she says.
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“Ah, so you’re still here. I was worried you two might have wandered off.” He says with a smile. “And how’s your brother’s recover coming?”
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"Okay, I think," she murmurs, swaying a little. She must have been fighting off sleep for hours, by the looks of it. Viana returns Garamond's smile slowly. The expression is awkward on her face, so used to frowning instead. It looks almost forced. "...Thanks for this, old man. ...I guess."
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He reaches for a letter sticking out from his front pocket. “—but we do have a business proposal for you. You’re looking a little under the weather. So I’ll let you sleep on it. But give it a look over, hm?”
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"I'll...wait until he wakes up, and then I will show it to him in the morning."
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