st_clare (
st_clare) wrote in
birthright_rpg2013-08-21 03:48 pm
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Adventures at the Full Service Island
It turned out that Searchlight was only about an hour's drive from Las Vegas, but Julianna slept through her wake-up call because she'd tossed and turned for most of the night after her conversation with Edmund. So when she got up it was nearly eleven o clock, which meant she didn't arrive at the car rental agency until almost noon. Nothing on this trip had gone according to plan so far except for her meeting with Dean Travers.
Fortunately, the agency wasn't busy when she arrived, and the Watcher was able to secure an automobile with a full tank of gas and a freshly vacuumed interior. She was going to have to get one of these on a permanent basis if and when she found something other than temporary lodgings.
The highway boasted mid-day traffic, and Julianna kept herself occupied by listening to the all-news station. The heat of the day meant she was going to need water. Damn this early afternoon sun. Clearly Nevada was not famous for its rainy season.
Searchlight really did turn out to be a blink-and-you'll-miss-it place, because she almost missed her exit. Brakes squealed a bit, and gravel crunched as she got off the highway. If Rhiannon was here, it should take her no time at all to find the girl. But first she was going to have to get some bottled water, because the heat was abysmal.
There was a gas station with the unimaginative name of the Gas N Go, and Julianna parked her rental in one of the few parking spaces and killed the engine. Even a place liked this had to have plastic bottles of water for sale. And then she could go about her business.
Fortunately, the agency wasn't busy when she arrived, and the Watcher was able to secure an automobile with a full tank of gas and a freshly vacuumed interior. She was going to have to get one of these on a permanent basis if and when she found something other than temporary lodgings.
The highway boasted mid-day traffic, and Julianna kept herself occupied by listening to the all-news station. The heat of the day meant she was going to need water. Damn this early afternoon sun. Clearly Nevada was not famous for its rainy season.
Searchlight really did turn out to be a blink-and-you'll-miss-it place, because she almost missed her exit. Brakes squealed a bit, and gravel crunched as she got off the highway. If Rhiannon was here, it should take her no time at all to find the girl. But first she was going to have to get some bottled water, because the heat was abysmal.
There was a gas station with the unimaginative name of the Gas N Go, and Julianna parked her rental in one of the few parking spaces and killed the engine. Even a place liked this had to have plastic bottles of water for sale. And then she could go about her business.
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Searchlight had pretty low self-esteem, to be selling souvenirs for Laughlin.
It was a shame, really, because it was a town that didn't recognize its own kitsch value. Devin was all about kitsch.
He placed the key chain on the counter, next to a scratch off ticket and a Pepsi. "And 10 bucks on pump 5."
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"Hey." There was a tap to her shoulder, and the Englishwoman startled out of the draft. "Are you gonna stand there all day, or can I get a beer?" the man next to her demanded. He looked like a trucker sort, longish hair and a few days' worth of beard growth bristling his cheeks and chin. Julianna was so cross that she almost told him to bugger off, but she decided that it wasn't worth it. She yanked two large bottles of water out of the rack, then stalked off in dignified silence.
There was a man in front of her at the counter, and she toyed with her borrowed keychain while waiting for the cashier to finish ringing the other customer up. "Aren't those things a rip-off?" she asked out of idle curiosity, pointing at the colorful scratch off ticket. "It seems as if you'd get better odds in a casino."
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"Not necessarily," Devin said, holding up the ticket. "Odds are 1 in 4 that I get a free ticket out of the deal, right? And since my main reason for buying these things is the satisfaction I get from scratching it, I think that's pretty fair."
The blond studied the back of the ticket, then looked back up at her. "Casinos make me twitchy, anyway."
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She could have said something else about how there were more dangerous things to gamble with, like one's life, but that would have been too much information. She was going to have to work on this business of maintaining her cover. At least in front of anyone who wasn't a recalcitrant Slayer.
"I take it you're not headed up the road for the glitz and glamour, then?"
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Devin watched, quietly amused, as the gruff man huffed impatiently behind them. Quietly, because he didn't really feel like getting his ass kicked in a gas station.
Being a natural smart-ass had its disadvantages.
"What do you think is the 'type' of person to spend their time in casinos?"
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The smile made the blond's angular face attractive, and if she'd remotely been in the mood to flirt with someone thirty years her junior she would have made something of it. But the unshaven lout from before was behind her, grumbling under his breath at the can of beer in his hand. Besides, she was on the job, and being on the job meant you had to be professional.
She collected her change and the paper bag the cashier handed her, checked the watch on her other wrist. Two o'clock. Fortunately it wouldn't take much time to make her rounds in a burg like this, and she believed she'd passed a post office on her way in. If they offered mailboxes for rent, she could make a discreet check of the names attached to them.
The day had become so hot that she had to pull one of the bottles out of the bag and open it immediately. A bloody good thing she'd dressed simply today. She was going to need a cold shower where she got back to her hotel as it was.
"You must be a student of some sort," she remarked lightly when the blond man also exited the store. "You look about the age of some of my students."
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Devin drifted toward his car. "I would think the people who run the casinos were the layabouts. Easy money, flowing in every day, taking advantage of people's human nature to...want more? You know, the house always wins."
He laughed good-naturedly, tucking the scratch off into his pants pocket. "I haven't been a student since I was 17. I'm what the condescending would call street smart."
Devin gave her another, longer glance. "But it's a good thing you're not condescending, right?"
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"I'm English, dear, and the English are naturally a bit condescending," she said airily, but it was partially a front. "I also work in academia, and laziness can abound there just as much as any profession. It's not exclusive to the more commercial enterprises."
The longer he looked at her like that, a dim sense of recognition stole over her. Obviously they'd never met, but the expression was familiar. Where had she seen him before?
"I don't mean to be intrusive," she began, taking another sip of her water. "But I feel as if I'm supposed to know you, and it's left me at a loss. Are you a celebrity?"
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The numbers ticked upward, and he set the pump to stay on its own. "A celebrity? Not really."
No, not a celebrity. His picture was in the back of a book, though. What was the least narcissistic way to put it?
He shrugged his shoulders. "Well, I'm a writer. You might have seen me that...way." Okay, so he liked when people recognized him on the street. It happened maybe once in a blue moon. It didn't mean Devin knew how to gracefully accept it.
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"Have you been reviewed by the Times?" she asked, because he'd knocked her a little off-kilter by his earlier remark about her presumptuousness, and that prevented her from just asking him for his name. "I enjoy their articles, and they have a reasonably good reviewer."
She'd actually been published herself, but it had been in some fairly obscure publications dealing with languages, so she wasn't egotistical enough to think he'd be aware of her non-covert line of work. The warmth was inching back into her expression, albeit a bit reluctantly. She should be working, not chatting up some stranger.
"Planning to be published again, or are you taking a sabbatical?"
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He smiled, almost sadly, wiping his hands on a disposable towel. "Some people are never satisfied."
Scratching at the stubble on his neck, he seemed to deliberate on something. Finally, he said, "I don't mean to harp on you about it, and it's probably none of my business. But you shouldn't be so quick to judge people.
"They can and will surprise you, sometimes in the best way, but only if you let them."
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Julianna could feel the corners of her well-formed mouth lifting almost of their own accord, and for once she took the words at face value. Rhiannon had been trying to make her angry, and it had worked, but there was no antagonism in the blond man's voice and so not even she could take offense at his words. The sun was very hot, and she took another drink of water. Had to stay hydrated, after all.
"You're not the first person to suggest it, love," she told him with that same smile. What would he look like clean-shaven? The Watcher steered her brain away from that bit of curiosity. She needed to go.
"I hope your ticket brings you luck," she offered randomly. "Even if you don't win the lottery, you know what the odds of success are."
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"Thanks, but I wouldn't know what to do with it if I did."
He started toward the driver's side, then paused, looking back at her. "The book is called Next of Kin, if you want to pick it up. It might not be your thing, but hey. It could kill a couple of hours."
Giving her a wave, Devin got into his car and started the engine. He'd scratch off the ticket after he got his work done.
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Maybe not all Americans were boorish and dreadful after all.