Sunday, September 15, 2013

Information to Share - 9.14.2013 [Kragen, Kali]

Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen's nights have been busy, and the other night had been no exception, there had been a deck of cards and two women, a few loose words and a hellish brawl in a Queens demented court. All of this had transpired, and might make a story or two to be told. But Kragen was battered and bruised after that little adventure, and tonight he sought greener, perhaps more civilized pastures.

So here he was, of all places. At a photo gallery. With a frontage that was entirely glass and most of the art hung on wires so that it floated in the air about him. Kragen, the man with his rictus grin and askew hair, all wrapped up in a silk suit that was for once, actually laundered seemed to wander about near the front, looking at various pictures here and there, perhaps trying to understand exactly what the artist was saying, exactly what they were trying to portray. Because this particular exhibit had no explanations, hell it didn't even have a name. Apparently the artist wanted the exhibit to stand on its own two feet.

So far from the look on Kragen's features....it wasn't standing, so much as falling face first onto the sidewalk.


Molly Toombs

Miraculously, in the past week and a half Molly's life found some semblance of normalcy again.  Of course, things had to crescendo their way up the weirdness scale before calming down, but the thumping scraping noises upstairs had been quiet for a while and her nightmares had abated.  Without the help of medication, she was able to sleep dreamlessly through the night once more.

The night was full of heavy, rolling black clouds and rumbles of thunder on the horizon.  These clouds, along with the on-and-off rain all day, did nothing but cement the fact that the floods in the smaller communities surrounding the city would worsen, and that more people would probably die, swept away in the rushing brown waters that tore roads apart and ripped homes from their foundations.

Thankfully, the city was relatively unflooded.  But at this pace, Molly wasn't certain that would last for long.  As she walked up the sidewalk, umbrella held over her head against the increasing patter-patter of rain, she was thankful that she lived on the fourth floor in her apartment building and not the bottom.  She was dressed for the cool weather in a pair of black leggings, black boots, and an oversized cream colored sweater that was low enough to cover her hips and rump and make the leggings-substituting-pants decision far less inappropriate than what many girls in their young twenties liked to strut the streets in.  There was a gray scarf (more fashion than utility) wrapped about her neck loosely, and she looked-- well, normal.

She'd fallen in the habit of looking through the windows she passed as she walked, but was halted by one face that called out to her, singing recognition and relevance.  She stood still, peered through the window to be sure, then reached out and taped her finger on the glass.  When Kragen's attention was caught, she'd smile and wave.


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen had been busy looking at some slowly rotating display of photo's of the homeless holding a coffee cup, probably an arts attempt at talking about consumerism destroying humanity, or how even the poor could be rich...to their own detriment. Eitherway the man seem's largely unimpressed with the slowly turning show piece and he was turning to walk further into the gallery when a sudden thumping could be heard behind him.

The man turned slowly, almost cautiously until he was looking at the window, those intense grey eyes finding Molly, and a brow of surprise rose upon his forehead as he spun around on one heel and strode up to the glass. He offered a quick wave before saying Hi, a Hi that was of course..lost to the glass. But then he moved gesturing to the door and pulled it open to say.

"Good Golly Miss Molly, I do declare you seem to be out in some rather unpleasant weather." He says holding the door. "Come in, I'm sure the photo's won't mind."


Molly Toombs

Kragen answered with a wave in turn, then gestured for her to join him at the gallery door.  She was willing to comply, clearly, because she turned and strode to the door with similar enough pace that she'd arrived under the small awning as he pulled the glass door inward and open for her to step inside.

"Oh, it's not the weather's fault it's unpleasant."  She said this casually, off-handed almost, and shook her umbrella off and closed it before she stepped inside.  "I'm hardly dressed for a gallery stroll, though."  She smiled half-apologetically, and glanced about.  Sure, there were a few people milling about on dates or group outings.  Some of which were dressed up, but there was an equal smattering of people in jeans and sneakers and sweaters as well.  Clearly, no one would call her out on her comfortable attire.

The umbrella was held in both hands, kept nearer to her torso because she wasn't sure where else to put it or what else to do with her hands.  Her hair was left down to hang near her shoulders, with a few waves or curls to be found mixed throughout the otherwise relatively straight style.  Make-up was scarce, but present enough to make the difference.  She clearly wasn't out for the sake of catching eyes or entertaining anybody.

"How've things been?"  She wanted to find a way to apologize for buggering off as suddenly as she did the last time they met, but didn't quite know how to frame it.  So instead she'd let that topic follow her into the gallery like an elephant taking up space in the room.


Kragen Kingsmith

Molly moves into the gallery and Kragen released the glass door, letting it swing back into place with a gentle thump of its padded stopper against the door jam before turning himself casually towards the young nurse who he had now encountered a few times. Encounters which had gotten more and more interesting as time had woven onward.

"Well the weathers temperament aside you are looking radiant as always." He offered with that rictus grin as gestured to the coat rack nearby, which..instead of baring coats, held a number of umbrella's. "Feel free to hang it up, it seems everyone else is, unless you prefer striking at photo's with an umbrella as your preferred form of showing displeasure."

She asks him how he's been and he choses to ignore the dull throb that still clung to his back after that brawl and spread his hands wide, that lighter in one of them as always it seemed as he shrugged. "I still live and breath, and blood still pumps with abandon. Which is to say dear Molly, that I am doing well." He lowered his chin then so that he looked into her eyes more directly, trying not to look down his nose at her as he said.

"And how about you?" His tone inquisitive as he stuck his hands in his coat pockets for a moment. "I hope you got home alright the other night?"


Molly Toombs

"Oh," is all that Molly says when he points out the coat rack.  She blinked at it once, then hooked her umbrella on one branch of the coat rack behind someone else's, then dusted her hands at her hips, onto the soft fabric of her sweater, before looking back to Kragen.

He complimented her, and she smiled-- the expression pulled more dominant on one side of her mouth than the other, showing that she was both flattered and humored.  Radiant was a strong and borderline poetic thing to call a woman, so she appeared to be certain that he was putting on airs and, in that moment, with that smile, called him out on doing so.  But the conversation had turned, and Molly made herself comfortable wandering the gallery idly with this increasingly familiar man.

He said he was doing well and asked if she got home safely the other night.  He was watching her while waiting for the answer, not observing any of the art that was up on display.  Molly's attention was pulled from the dangling pictures, rounded blue eyes meeting Kragen's for a moment.  At first she seemed unsure of what direction to take with her answer-- if she should level with him (for she did have her suspicions about how he'd reacted to Bertram along with her) or not.

She decided not, apparently, because she shrugged one shoulder and glanced out the window as the sky crackled with lightning.

"Oh yeah, no sprained ankles or madmen demanding my cash on the way."  There was a beat, and then in a somewhat cramped and unsure tone she added:  "I kind of regret taking off as quick as I did.  It was an awkward way to leave a conversation."


Kragen Kingsmith

She called him out with that silent smile and his own grin seemed to confirm as he stretched his grin just a little bit more as they moved through the the gallery. But he said no more on the status of Molly's looks, leaving their other topic of conversation to spring to the fore.

"I would certainly agree, if the king of siam had been present he might have been a little displeased." He said as he looked away briefly. "But I understood." He says with a nod. "I understood quite well." His words linger, and when he looks back so too do his eyes. Meeting her's and impressing upon her his meaning.

But then his eyes slip away again, turning to the world about them as lightning crashed and the world outside continued to soak up mother natures wrath. "So aside from escaping the attentions of rather sibilant men with palid complexions...what is new in your world" He inquired as he reached out and tapped one photo, causing it to spin wildly upon its wire.


Molly Toombs

Kragen wasn't bothered by the prompt and sudden way that she'd left that street corner the other night.  He understood.  When he expressed that understanding, he chose his words carefully and stressed the ones that were key.  He stressed that he understood quite well, and Molly felt his eyes boring into her so she looked back to him.  Darkened eyebrows rose with significance when their eyes met again, this time conveying a message.

I understand, that message said.

There was a faint nervous flutter in her chest.  She'd been apart from vampires for the better part of a week and a half, and although there was still a hiccup of supernatural between then and now, she was just growing comfortable with feeling safe once more.  To bring the topic back up made her anxious, but wasn't enough to rock her world or make her try to escape the subject.

He confirmed her suspicions by speaking to 'palid complexions' when referring to the person she'd fled from that night.  So, he was in the know.  She studied his profile while he reached out and tapped at the hanging picture, and decided to go out on a limb when she answered his question to what was new with her.

"Well, I found out the apartment above mine is haunted.  That was a night to drink away."


Kragen Kingsmith

Molly could have let it drop, could have gone on about day to day business at the hospital, or a new movie she'd seen. She could have talked about hanging out with Nate, or reading a good book. Kragen had left his words vague, but understood not only to keep the secret what it was, but to let her keep away from the topic if she wished.

But then she's on about a haunted apartment, and that brought an amused smile to the man's lips as he nodded. "I could just imagine." A dry chuckle escaping his lips. "I'm not a fan of ghosts either, there's not a whole lot you can do to them that hasn't already been done. They are after all...already dead." 

He smiled at her, a macabre little joke he hoped might lighten the ever darkening mood. It didn't help that the world outside was growing darker and darker as the storm rolled overtop of the city, blanketing it in its wet and thunderous embrace.

"It might be time to find yourself a new apartment...I wish i could help you there but, finding real estate isn't my particular forte."


Molly Toombs

"Eh, I don't know."  Molly sounded conflicted when Kragen said that she should find herself a new place to live.  For now, the woman seemed content to look out the window and watch the storm as it rolled over the city.  The rain fell harder, steadier.  People were running to and fro on the sidewalk in front of them-- Saturday nights in the arts district were always busy ones, after all-- seeking shelter from the pelting rain.

"I've been there for two years.  I'm settled in, I don't really want to go anywhere else.  Anyway, all of the--," and she waved her hand vaguely in front of her, the motion swirling like a slow motion whisk in batter.  "...Activity, I guess, just stays upstairs.  Nothing's happened in my home yet, so I think I'll be alright.

"Besides," she added, and looked away from the window to grin up at Kragen playfully, "worse comes to worse I can just get an old priest and a young priest to come on by, right?"

Then there came a deep rumbling, the type of thunder that you felt rolling around in your chest before the roar met your ears.  Molly stood a little straighter, looked attentively out the window, and waited for the noise to subside.  The other denizens of the gallery noticed, too.  Every human body went still, looked up, toward the window perhaps, and waited for the sound to stop before all of the chatter started back up, now about the storm and the floods and how this certainly wasn't helping things.

With the thunder quieted for the time being, she frowned faintly and shook her head.  "It's weather like this that makes me consider just sucking it up and buying a car already."


Kragen Kingsmith

She says she'd rather stick it out, deal with it. Molly was a survivor, or at least stubborn enough not to be frightened away by something she didn't understand. Kragen filed that away and offered her a chuckle as she made her own joke about exorcisms, and he raised a brow as he nodded a few times, turning on his heel as that rumbling rolled through the city. The man taking a moment to watch just as everyone else did, but if Molly happened to notice, happened to look up at the man as it happened, it was a smile writ small and subtle upon his features, not worry, not concern....but a smile.

"Well I might be able to assist you with that particular issue, at least for the immediate moment." He offers as he looks back to her now. "I don't usually offer taxi services, its a bit below my paygrade. But one does ever so rarely get to see a haunted building." He suggests, offering her a way out of here that didn't involve getting drenched.

She'd just have to get into a car with a man who was in the know about the supernatural...and who'd she'd met only a few times before, what could go wrong?


Molly Toombs

Any smart girl would know better than to get in a car with a strange man.  And if Molly was anything, it was a smart girl.  She'd dug her heels in on refusing to let Flood know where she lived, and wouldn't budge even for the smooth talking, loomingly tall, chillingly unsettling undead man.

But things have changed since that point.  She finally took a ride home from the vampire, as she had little other choice and in the midst of her ordeal with the necromancer and his room of death, she made the uncomfortable discovery that Flood was the person she'd trusted most in that setting.  She'd let him drive her home, and even now was trying to decide the next best step to take in the vampire's pursuit of her attention.

So, while she was smart enough not to take rides home from strangers, she was also keen enough to realize that if she's already been driven home by someone who had every reason within his bones to take her very life away and survived that trip, then accepting the ride from this older gentleman who parried words and wit with her so charmingly couldn't be too bad.

Sure, Nate had told her that he was involved in some kind of mercenary rabble-rousing circuit, but what harm would that do to Molly?  She had no political relevance, so she highly doubted she needed to worry about ulterior motives in that regard from this man of fire and explosives.

"Well, Kragen, I appreciate you stooping so low as to offer to be my taxi for the evening."  Her grin was lively again, and she lifted one eyebrow to him.  "I'd happily accept.  And I appreciate it, by the way."

She reached out and stopped the still-twisting picture with two fingers, then slowly took her hand away to ensure it stayed still.  The same hand gestured lightly toward the door.  "Unless you still wanted to look around?  Although I've got to say, you looked downright bored when I spotted you."


Kragen Kingsmith

"Even us high and mighty gentleman can be brought low and scraping by but the faintest attention from the fairer sex." He says it dramatically, humourously like his nose was stuck in permanent hoity toity mode and then his grin became a more genuine thing and he started towards the door. "Besides your quite right. I honestly think I'd rather drench my head in napalm then stand around in this effrontery to the idea of art for another second."

He started for the door then, stopping ever so briefly to retrieve Molly's umbrella as they made their way to the doorway. He tipped an imaginary hat with Molly's umbrella before handing it back to her. He wouldn't need it it seemed, not at all worried about his second hand suits...he could aways buy more, ten dollars a dozen.

He fell in step beside her once more and briefly looked around at the display one last time before leaning in to speak in a conspiritorial manner. "Is it just me, or does art in these modern times, seem a little ridiculous? I mean...these pictures don't tell you anything an informed individual should already know."


Kali

Ahh, rain.  It's a cleansing experiences that helps wipe just a bit of the grime off the city.  And with the way that Denver had been pelted by the stuff, you could imagine that the city was in need of some very serious cleansing indeed.  And you wouldn't be wrong; there are all manner of dirty little deeds scumming up the streets, whether it was necromancers or Sabbat backroom dealings or Camarilla charm oozing out like an oil spill.  The rain would pelt at all of that, but while it could send rivers of dirt flowing into the sewers, it couldn't wash that kind of scum away.

Kali hates the rain, if she's being honest.  It doesn't bother her physically of course; all but extreme cold or heat is infinitely managable when you're no longer alive.  But it screws up her fashion sense because you can't go out looking like a high-class street walker in the rain and not get people wondering.  So tonight, she's walking along in a very different look than normal; it's still slut-chic but the corset is covered with a black leather overcoat, the heeled boots have been traded for one-inch soled Doc Martins and her lower half is less leather pants, more torn-up jeans.  She flicks a cigarette into the gutter as she passes by the photo gallery...where someone familiar catches her eye.

She pauses.  Takes a step back to get a better look.  And she cocks her head, smiling curiously.  She remembers Molly of course, and she has a mystery in her head about the girl.  So she gives a quick look around to make sure there aren't Lasombra skulking in the shadows like a stalker and then waits there since it looks like she's exiting with this guy she hasn't met yet.  She doesn't try to be sneaky; she smiles wide and waves. 


Molly Toombs

Kragen's wordsmithing was chuckled at, but not much more.  She accepted the umbrella when he handed it to her, and once outside the device bloomed out to create a shield to keep her dry.  She found the angle that the wind had the rain falling at and tipped her umbrella to be most effective.  The umbrella itself was simple, a plain black thing with a large span of coverage.  It was plenty big for two people, so Kragen's dismissing any need to be sheltered from the rain was simply tsk-tsk'ed at, and she would stand near his side and hold the umbrella to cover the pair of them anyways.

"I won't lead you astray; I'm not very interested in art myself.  Or, well, not visual art at least, not by much."  She shrugged one shoulder and went on.  "I came to one of these galleries on a date last month, and was bored enough to slip out the back.  Although, to be fair, that might not have been the best idea because that's where I ran into Bertram for the first time."

And hey!  Speaking of running into vampires....

Up the sidewalk there was a woman with flame red hair and an overcoat to keep her sheltered from the rain.  Molly squinted at her through the gray blur that such heavy rain liked to turn the world into, then slowed her pace when recognition settled in.  Kali was smiling and waving pleasantly enough.  Molly had to force her way past the initial spasm of fight-or-flight that came, as her first impression of this woman was trying to keep a door closed and prevent her from entering with that gun in her hand.

Logically, though, Kali had done her no harm.  Molly shouldn't have to be too concerned, right?  After all, the red-haired woman was only trying to be of assistance when she ran after her into the antiques shop.  She was trying to keep her and Flood from walking into the mayhem that they'd found, and then did no harm to either of them (although it seemed to Molly that Kali and Flood were on different sides of the same war [rivalry?]).

So, cautiously, Molly lifted a hand and showed Kali her palm in a greeting that was much like a wave, but still instead of side-to-side.

"Oh here we go," Molly murmered, half to herself and partly for Kragen as well.


Kragen Kingsmith

[Per+Empathy? What you talkin bout Molly?]
Dice: 3 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 6) ( success x 1 )


Molly Toombs

Molly comes across as tense, obviously.  She's very uncertain of this Kali woman, and seems ready for confrontation.  Now, Molly clearly doesn't want any sort of fight with Kali, because the way she stiffens and stares at the red-haired woman makes it quite clear that she has full knowledge of the fact this woman is a Vampire.

Simultaneously, there's a sense of resolve.  She seems to know that interaction probably isn't going to be avoided, and is steeled to be braced for whatever it is that's about to come.


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen receives a spot of honour beneath Mollys umbrella, the woman standing near so that he was protected as well and would not have to see his silk suit into the trash heap at the end of the day. He looks up at the umbrella curiously but seems to nod in appreciation as they step out into the street in search of the old man's vehicle.

"The heart most definitely does funny things doesn't it?" He offers in response as to how she ended up meeting Bertram. "That must have felt like a blind date nightmare." He muses softly as he stepped out and seemed ready to turn down the street when he notices the tension in Molly's body.

He watches her for a moment, wary and becoming increasingly alert as he watched her wave and turned to see the woman named Kali waving in response. He did not know this person, had not met her. [but then how many people do you meet in a city of millions]. He took a moment to consider before turning his gaze back to Molly and asked quietly.

"You, my dear Miss Molly, seem to have a predilection for a very specific crowd."


Kali

They notice her, and Molly raises her hand for an enthusiastic wave.  Honestly, the little spitfire of a drug lord doesn't expect Molly to be particularly trusting, and why should she?  The Ravnos had tried to warn them off of the strange building and then walked in and blew the head off of a necromancer as things started to get weird.  Kali knows weird and she knows how people react to weird.  She wouldn't trust her either.

The usual cocky smirk is gone at this particular moment; it's a smile and while there's a bit of amusement in it (there always is), she's not seeming to enjoy the woman's potential discomfort.  "Hey...you person that I met once."  Okay, now it becomes a bit more of a grin at the joke that isn't really a joke.  "I'd use your name if I'd gotten it, but crazy dance-hall nights, y'know?"  Hey, it was a dance of a sort.  Bertram danced with his fists, Kali danced with a gun, Bo with a knife, Flood and Molly with their feet (defensively).  Besides, what's she going to say in mixed company, Sorry about not asking your name while we were fighting off the corpse-fucking wizard and his army of anthropomorphic Disney furniture?  Doesn't have the right ring to it.

Ahe looks over Kragen a moment and gives him a bit of a smile.  "Hey there.  Sorry, we haven't met.  Although technically, she and I haven't met either, but...dance hall.  You were listening I'm sure.  Kali.  I'm in the pharmaceutics business."  It's meant for both of them, of course, and a crossing of extended hands, so that her arms form an 'X' with a hand held to the both of them.


Molly Toombs

Kragen's whisper near her ear was met with a glance in his direction and a significant raising of darkened eyebrows.  "Tell me about it," she whispered back, then looked to face Kali as the woman in the corset, jeans, and overcoat approached.

The woman gave her introduction, and Molly smiled politely but uncertainly (of course, it was only natural).  Pale arms cloaked by the coat crossed in front of her so one hand could be extended to Kragen and one to Molly.  As Kragen was offered the right hand, that left Molly to try and shake with her left.  It was awkward, but she did reach out and grasp Kali's hand (cold, cold and pale and with no pulse that she could detect, no thrum or throb under her fingers) and give it a small shake before reclaiming her hand.

"Yeah, I'll say it was a crazy night..."  And then, after clearing her throat a little and adjusting her grip on the umbrella:  "I'm Molly.  And this is my friend, Mr. Kragen Kingsmith."


Kali

[[Ack!  Sorry, I should have said in here.  Kali spends blood to appear human.]]


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen usually wasn't the sort to take the back seat in situations. It wasn't how he operated, and he rarely let anyone set the pace for him [a small group excluded] but this time...this time he lets Molly set the pace. he steps up, those intense grey eyes surveying all there was to see, of Molly, of Kali, and of the interactions between them both and with him.

Kali, she of the pharmaceutical business offers her greeting. Her enthusiasm and warmth at a glance seeming honest and forthright [oh how you catch flies with honey] and the hand extended is taken and shaken. For her part Kali can probably be very certain that Kragen is human, his pulse strong and vital, his skin ruddy in the way older men tend to be.

He is introduced though, so he simply inclines his head to the woman and says. "A pleasure, to be sure." He offers politely, and perhaps even somewhat rakishly as he took his hand back and looked at Molly.

"A dance hall, you don't say? And they say the old ways are dead."


Kali

"Molly and Kragen."  She says them as if committing them to memory and nods.  "All right, I won't forget those."

She glances from the woman to the man, and then back with a vaguely apologetic look in case she's not wanted here.  No indications such (beyond Molly's wariness), but you never know.  "I actually hope I'm not intruding.  I just happened to see you and wanted to come check and see if you were okay after all of that.  Flood and I have a little bit of a love-hate dynamic, but you seemed alright with him at that particular moment and I had a few fires to Captain Planet out so it seemed like the best course of action."

She cocks her head, looking legitimately curious to the answer of her next question.  "You're doin' fine though?"

[[Per+Emp: Are ya fine?  How ya doin?]]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (2, 6, 8, 10, 10) ( success x 4 )


Molly Toombs

[Hah!  Woops!  Well then, disregard all of that stuff about cold hands and no pulse and replace it with more suspicion. :D]


Molly Toombs

Molly and Kragen stood near to one another, but that was largely for the purpose of sharing the umbrella.  That was difficult to do with several feet of polite space between shoulders, after all.  But neither had arms around the other.  Hands were kept to themselves.  If Kali was interrupting something, it probably wasn't a date that was going incredibly well.

Plus, there was the obvious age gap to keep in mind there.  That tended to skew perceptions of interactions between people.

Kali appeared apologetic, and came across as relatively sincere if nothing more.  Molly was curious about, struck and intrigued by, and downright wary of the fact that Kali had felt warm (not cold, as she'd expected, not cold at all) when she'd shaken her hand.  She knew the woman was a vampire, but if that was the case then why did she feel so alive?

The questions swam in her mind, but didn't impact her ability to maintain conversation.  When she spoke, her tone was even and slow, words a little cautious but mostly deliberate when she answered.
"Well, I made it home in one piece, at least.  But I'm fine now.  Thank you."  Well, at least the 'thank you' sounded sincere.


Molly Toombs

Molly said she was fine, but Kali could see right through that.  She could see every detail.

The young woman put up a strong front.  She was level and in control of her own condition.  However, she was clearly not 'fine', as she'd expressed.  That night took its toll on her, and the very subject of the escapade with the Necromancer and having to escape it with Flood made Molly want to pale, made her mind try to feel faint to reject the memory, made her want to sit down and just breathe for a few minutes.

She was worn out and on edge.  She was distrustful of everything around her, as this had become a constant state of being for a woman thrust into a world of monsters and shadows, and sent through that new world with a pat on the bottom and a firm knowledge that she had no way to keep herself safe from all of these dark and scary things.

This distrust was currently focused on Kali like a laser beam.  That said, the distrust was mingled with some desire to want to trust, to want to be comfortable, oddly enough.  She wanted to like Kali, but was smart enough to know better than to become comfortable around someone who would consider her a food-stuff.


Kragen Kingsmith

This was a dance meant for two, and in this case the dancers were Kali and Molly. Kragen had no inclining of what had happened at the 'dance hall' he hadn't been there, and his knowledge of those involved was tenuous at best. He had been busy elsewhere, with his own work and that mean't that here and now, rather then interjecting blindly, he listened.

But his silence does not mean that he is no less animated. He has that rictus grin stretched across his features, his teeth hidden by lips for the moment as he turns from Kali to Molly. But there is a definite look of interest, and contemplation when there is talk of Flood, there weren't many people, living or dead who went by a moniker such as that, and so the grey eyed man had a fairly good idea of just who the conversation involved.

This drew his gaze curiously to Molly, it was a look that spoke to 'just how deep in are you?' 

He at last says something at least. "In one piece? That sounds like one hell of a dance party." He looks at Kali then, his lips falling from that smile slightly. "Just my type of dance."


Kali

Molly says that she's fine, and there's nothing in Kali's face that suggests she suspects otherwise.  She smiles and she nods, her eyes flicking to Kragen when he speaks up and says it's his kind of dance.  That draws a quick, appreciative look over the man and a grin before she looks back to Molly.

Because here's the truth: Kali's more perceptive than she lets on sometimes.  She plays the fool and she acts oblivious; she's jokes and pop culture references and teases and creatively-worded multi-lingual profanity.  But Molly in particular knows how deadly Kali can be; she watched a man's head split open like a ripe melon, and that was with a gun, much less vampiric powers.  Kali loves it when people underestimate her, because that's right when she can strike.

The point here isn't that she's going to strike.  The point here is that she knows.  And she doesn't make a big show of it, doesn't try to out Molly in front of her friend.  There are many reasons for this, but the primary one is simple: she doesn't want to.

So she smiles, and she digs into her overcoat for a card.  The card reads 'Aunt Buffy's Private Stock Shipping Service' with a picture that looks like something you might find on a Monopoly Chance card, with an elderly woman leaning out of the window of a shipping truck with her hand raised in a wave.  There's a phone number on it.

"I'm glad," she says, and she seems honest again.  "Listen…call it crazy business networking, but if you need anything…you don't have to.  Rip this up after I go and toss it away, that's fine.  But if you need anything…shipping service, a little conversation, whatever.  Then keep this and gimme a call sometime.  I promise I have a good ear and I love talking on the phone.  Just call me Teen Girl #3 in Random High School Comedy: The Movie that way."

She scrawls something on the pack with a pen from her pocket really quick and hands it over.  "No face-to-face needed if you don't want, I promise."

On the back it reads: Be smart and be safe.


Kali

[[Oh, and just for grins, a Charisma+Emp: "Yes, I'm indeed trying to look out for you"]]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (5, 5, 6, 8, 9) ( success x 4 ) [WP]


Molly Toombs

The look that Kragen shot her was not missed.  However, Molly had a method to socializing with Vampires that she'd taught herself to stick to.  You don't show them your nerves, you don't challenge them but at the same time you don't make yourself look weak.

The best advised that Tommy Lynch could have given her, the advice he did give her, was to make herself not be interesting.  While she appreciated his suggestion, she was afraid that it was too late for that to work.  Regardless of what she tried, it seemed that she was some sort of catnip for the undead.  They flocked to her, even to the point that ghosts apparently decided to haunt the apartment above her head because of its proximity to her home.

While she couldn't dampen her own appeal, she could at least find a fine line to walk and stick to it.  So, the look that Kragen gave her was noted but not answered outright, not in front of Kali, because that would go against Molly's own sense of code.  She didn't want to confess how nervous it made her to know very accutely how deeply submerged she was in this scary new world.

As Kali handed her a business card, and as Molly reached out to accept it, she felt the cold dark waters of this unknown society creep from her chest to her shoulders.  This would be the fifth business card from a person of less-than-average nature, and it would be added to a growing collection on her dresser.
And yet, when Molly accepted that card, the words that Kali had to give along with that phone number seemed comforting.  She looked up into the red-haired woman's face, and for the first time since she realized the vampire was there waving at her she didn't appear so... tense, or distrusting.  Now she just looked curious, openly so, and maybe even a little bit touched by the gesture.

"...Thank you," again is all that she had to say at first.  The card was flipped over, and Molly's mouth pressed into a line that might indicate she was trying to subdue a reflexive smile.  "I'll keep a hold of this."  The card was tucked down the front of her shirt, for tonight she carried no bag or purse and had no pockets in the leggings or sweater that she wore.  When she looked back up to Kali again, it was with a small and grateful smile.  "I don't doubt that I'll come across some reason to reach out."
Again, the thunder clapped in the sky, and Molly paused, glanced up, then cleared her throat.

"Well, ah, I may have to ask for you to excuse us, Kali.  Kragen here is so kind to take me home, and that's where we were headed."


Kali

She scowls instinctively and looks up when she hears the thunder clap, the glance mirroring Molly's.  Again, Kali hates the rain.  But she's quickly back to Molly and the scowl shifts to a smile.  She taps two fingers to her brow, then shifts them forward as if giving a little salute.

"Of course.  You kids have a good night.  Don't do anything I wouldn't do...which you probably don't have to worry about, the list is pretty slim there."

She gives a little wink and nods to Kragen.  "Nice to meet you Kragen.  Molly, good to see you again.  Stay dry."  And with that she nods, turns and starts off on her way.


Molly Toombs

Molly would watch Kali go on her way with a smile and a wave-- this time, the wave wasn't just a still salute of greeting.  It was warmer, more genuine.  Molly was pleased to find that she was walking away from the encounter unharassed and without the hair on the back of her neck standing on end.  "Oh, I'm sure we'll be fine," she played along with the woman's warning not to do anything she wouldn't do.  "Have a good night."

Then, when Kali had been on her way for a solid couple of seconds, Molly looked back up to Kragen and shrugged her shoulders almost apologetically.

"So," she explained, and offered him a sheepish and crooked smile.  "I don't know how they keep finding me.  But they do."

Then:  "Shall we?"


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen listens still, and this is probably the least that Molly has ever heard the man speak, he was always vocal, always upfront with a quick bit of banter or a double entendre. But he is watchful today, and he watches as Kali hands Molly that card, and of course...he cannot help but see those words written on the opposite side of it. The fact that they are there has him examining Kali all the more carefully, like his eyes were a microscope and she was an amoeba.

But then they are parting ways, Molly says she needs him to drive her home, and Kragen tilts his head to the side. "She works me like a slave she does." He comments as he steps out and waits for Kali to take her leave.

She winks at him Kali does, saying its nice to meet him, and perhaps a little skeptically, the man nods. "It was a singular pleasure. To you the same hope." He says with tilt of an invisible hat before he watches Kali take her leave, heading off into the rainy night.

But then they are alone, and Kragen is waiting a few seconds more before he responds. "We shall indeed dear molly. My chariot is right over here." He says witha  gesture to a fine looking luxury sedan...with rental plates. 


Molly Toombs

Kragen pointed out where his vehicle was parked, and Molly adjusted the umbrella when the wind shifted, moving how the rain fell along with it.  Her boots splashed where puddles grew on the sidewalk as she walked along with the older gentleman in his silk suit to where his car was.

The vehicle was nice, and it looked clean from what she could see through the window.  The plates indicated the vehicle was a rental, so she assumed that the inside would smell strongly of a forced sanitizing air freshener solution.  That was just fine, though.  However, she did find herself curious enough to ask as they walked, the dull low heels of her boots thudding on the sidewalk (although that noise was silent, covered up and swallowed whole by the smacking of rainwater against every surface in sight).

"I know you said you were new to the area...  I didn't realize you were just on your way through?"

There you go, Molly.  Talk about mundane things instead, like business and travel and rental cars.


Kragen Kingsmith

They move off, alone once more and come up to that fine luxury sedan in a forest green. Kragen pulls out a pair of keys and pops the locks with the FOB and even does the solid gentlemanly thing and open the door for Molly. Once she was safetly inside, her umbrella folded up within he climbed in the other side and nodded to her casually as he stuck the keys into the ignition and turned the car on.

"The nature of my work tends to keep me in a state of transience,  but that varies. Sometimes I will be in a place but a night, others I have stayed for years." He offered her a wry grin as he took the car out of park and started to drive them along towards wherever Molly would direct him.

"Its shaping up that I might be in the market for my own car soon however. This particular contract might be of a particular length, so it seems I'll be getting at least..somewhat comfortable."


Molly Toombs

Once inside the car, Molly left the passenger door open long enough to shake the umbrella out as well as she could manage before closing it and setting it on the floor near her feet.  She'd thanked him, of course, for opening the door for her, and buckled herself into the seat.  She settled back, not bothering to adjust the seat because she didn't like taking such liberties in cars she didn't ride in too often.

When Kragen was in the car with her, he'd expressed the nature of his work, and then revealed that his current 'contract' would probably keep him here for long enough to get comfortable.  Molly's eyebrows hopped upward, and she bit her lower lip with one tooth like she was trying to keep words from falling out of her mouth before they were considered.

But, inevitably, she speaks anyways.  Her hands were folded together into her lap after she'd pulled the hem of her sweater to make sure the top of her lap was covered up.  Leggings left very little to the imagination, after all.

"So, I've heard a rumor about your line of business, Kragen, and I was curious to know if you'd confirm it or not.  Someone told me you were a bit of a... mercenary."  Clearly, her interest is piqued.  This was the kind of excitement that she strained for back when she was living a normal life, bored of the mundane and unaware of the fact that Denver was actually teeming with monsters and the undead.  Her eyes all but sparkled when she looked over and watched his reaction to what she had to say.

"Makes me wonder, what your contract here might be?"


Kragen Kingsmith

It seemed someone had been digging, someone had been talking. The question was....who was it? Kragen had his suspicions of course, he always did. But that meant nothing when your confronted with what it is you do outside of your own terms. Now Kragen doesn't look upset by this reveal, he certainly seems to hold no need for penance or reproach when Molly watches him. 

But he meets her eyes, those intense grey eyes locking on hers as he nodded and said. "You have some very informed little doves dear Molly." He said as he took a turn, heading off into traffic. "It would seem we are a little more intertwined then even I had imagined." He said with some concern then, his eyes flickering over to her as he hit a red light and drew the car to a slow stop.

"I have recently been contracted by the man you know as Flood, to assist him in bringing the growing rivalry between two vampiric factions to a more decisive close." He puts it all out there, lets her know right away that they had a shared acquaintance. In truth the tuck of his lip, and the way he momentarily sucked on his teeth made it seem like that fact did not thrill him.

Not one bit.


Molly Toombs

Kragen didn't seem very humored with the conversation, but at the same time he wasn't unwilling to continue it.  He expressed that they were more intertwined than he imagined, and then as they rolled to a stop at a red light he explained that he was here because Flood hired him to help tip the scales in this War, so to speak.

Molly's expression wasn't so sparkling and curious anymore.  Rather, a grim sort of cast takes her features, and recognition of exactly how intertwined they actually were settled in.  Molly had been leaned forward, turned at the waist to face Kragen more completely, but now she settled back into the seat again and looked out the windshield.  Her eyes were unfocused on the world outside, just looking at the glass and how the wipers passed back and forth overtop of it.

"Well," she said finally.  "That does explain some things."

She'd wet her lips, be quiet for another few ticks of the second hand on the watch on her wrist (concealed under the sleeve of her cream colored sweater), then continue.

"Flood's been persuing me.  I'm not certain of his game.  I was sure he was just toying with me at first, very much like a cat and mouse.  But... I'm not so sure that's the case now.  I think I'm getting pulled in to this world and society and I can't find my way out, and now it seems like Flood's not just guiding me in deeper, but sheltering me on the way down."  Beat.  "If that makes any sense..."


Kragen Kingsmith

[Per+emp]
Dice: 3 d10 TN6 (7, 8, 10) ( success x 4 ) [WP]


Molly Toombs

When he takes the moment to study her tone and her face, he'll find that she's deeply conflicted about the whole affair.

On one hand:  Vampires are fucking terrifying.  The fact that she realized they were real meant that she had to accept that everything else could be real as well-- a few other things have already been confirmed.  That shook her to her core, and made her very uncomfortable and scared for her life.  When she spoke of Flood, she sounded like she didn't trust him-- like she was just waiting for the moment that it's revealed her every interaction with him has been a build up to a trap.

On the other hand:  The world wasn't as boring as she thought, and that boredom was about to kill her.  She was thrilled in a chilly, scary way (like when you go to see a horror movie) by the fact that she was one of a select few plain Jane humans to know that this is all real.  She was intrigued.  She liked Flood.  She wanted to see more of him.  She said that he was guiding her deeper into this world, and it seemed that she was prepared to follow.

She was confused, conflicted, and had a strong need to learn more.


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen's eyes saw more then what was simply on the surface. He saw the fear of the unknown in Molly's eyes and he also saw the intrigue, the undeniable need to know more. To see with unclouded eyes the reality of the world, horrific though it maybe.  There is a hint of a smile breaking through his frown now. But wary caution still clung to his features as he looked her up and down once more before the light turned green and he started to drive once more.

"I've seen it a thousand times." Kragen says smoothly, a hint of warning in his voice as he speaks of Floods likely intention. "He'll draw you down so deep that when at last the bubble around bursts from the pressure, the only person who you'll think your able to turn too will be him. Then he'll have you, and he'll either make you like me, but a slave to your passions, or worse...he'll make you one of them." That last idea puts a hint of bile and causticity into Kragen's voice, like the idea of becoming one of them was abhorrent. 

"I assure you dear Molly, it might seem like a wonderful ride...but it isn't. I've been on that ride, and it took years to get free of it."


Molly Toombs

Kragen's advice was sage, and given through a ghost of a smile (at first, at least).  As was the case with anything that had to do with the supernatural, Molly listened carefully and absorbed whatever information there was to gain.

He cautioned her, warned that while things may seem okay now they wouldn't be later.  He wanted her to understand that this was certainly a trap, and that Flood no doubt had nefarious plans for her.  She stopped staring at the windshield and looked to him again, blinked slowly, then nodded.

"I don't think you're wrong," she said, and at first it seemed that was all she would say.  But then she continued, after only a second or two.  "I know others.  I'm networking now, I guess."  The last comment came with a little chuckle, and she shook her head.  "Truthfully, I'm more wary of Bertram than I am of Flood.  I feel like he may try to put me in a position where I owe him a favor, and then wring that leverage for everything it's worth."

She felt tired all at once.  Being introspective with herself was one thing, but confessing these suspicions and thoughts aloud was another.  Hearing the words carried on her own voice made her uncertain of them, and made her want to re-evaluate what she'd concluded on these matters already.

She realized all at once that Kragen was taking her home but didn't know where she lived, so she interjected with a quick set of simple instructions on how to reach her apartment building.  Just make like you're going downtown, but then turn on this street instead.  Then you turn here, and the building you want will be on this corner.

When they were on a path headed in the right direction (the ride wasn't very long, really, it would take him perhaps seven minutes to drive her there), she asked:

"So, what did you mean, he'll make me like you? "


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen wasn't the one spilling the beans, he hadn't broken those laws the nightwalkers had set in place to protect their kind. Someone else had done that, now...now he was just arming someone with the weaponry they would need to see themselves safe, or at least doomed to a fate of their own choosing. There was relief on his features when Molly agreed that he was probably right about Flood, that one way or another, he was intending in some form, to make Molly his be it the simplest ways, or the most grave it was all but a certainty.

"Every single last one of them want's something Miss Molly, and they all have their coin to buy it. the danger, more often then not. Is that what they want is either you...or what lies in your veins." He offers as he turns the car about, moving to take her downtown but not downtown.

"There are more states then just alive, undead, and dead." He stated when she asked about what it mean't to be him, and some might have let it lie there. But not Kragen, he was arming Molly, making a fortress of her mind and her heart.

"They call this state ghouldom. When a living human drinks enough of a vampires blood to halt the aging processes, to give them powers and a few other things besides." He gestures to himself then. "I'll be turning eighty in march. I am what you'd call a ghoul." He holds up a finger then, as if this point that came next was VERY important. "The thing about drinking vampire blood, and I am ashamed of this, is that its addictive, more then weed, more then caffine, more then crack or meth...you want it. You need it, and when you get to be as old as I am...your life starts to depend on it." His voice rings hollow in that moment, but he presses on.

"Problem is, it affects your mind too. Especially if...say, you drink to much of one vampires blood. It makes you want them, makes you trust them...makes you love them. Can be a pint or it could be a drop, but if enough of it gets into you...your their's mind body and soul." He says with a shake of his head. "That's how he'd get you, that's how he'd keep you." 

He comes to another stop light and looks over at Moly once more gravely. "Only two ways to break the hold, I've been through both. The first, is to kill the fucker who bond's you. It hurts like a son of a bitch when they die...but it works. The other way, is to deny yourself for months...months and months, never seeing them, never talking to them, never thinking about them." He grimaced as he gripped the steering wheel.

"I can assure you, neither are a particular hoot."


Molly Toombs

Again, Kragen had information to share and Molly soaked it up like a sponge.

She was silent the whole time he spoke, adding nothing and asking no questions-- simply listening.  She was looking out the window again when he started, but then he started to explain what 'ghouldom' was.  At that point, she turned her head slowly to look at him.  He confessed that he was turning eighty years old this spring, and her expression changed to one of muted shock.  It's not that she disbelieved him-- in fact, she had no reason to do anything but believe what he said was true.  After all, if vampires were real, it only made sense that drinking their blood as they did that of humans would have some sort of shared supernatural impact.

He expressed that he was one of these things, and that you became one because you drank vampire blood, and that you relied on it.  He explained that this was how they got you, how they made you yours.  Her eyebrows hopped up on her forehead again, and she committed that one not just to memory, but to a mental sticky note that would hang someplace she would see it often.  This was something she had to stay aware of, for it could be exactly how Flood would end up trying to trick her, to have and keep her.  She was curious, she had to know more, but that didn't mean that she wished for undeath.

Then, in case you do end up too deep, he explained how to get back out.  He says he's done both, and with a grim expression he advised that neither were fun.

At the end of his explanation there was quiet, and it lasted some time.  Then in what would prove a bold maneuver for someone who just learned the man who looked like he was 45 years old was actually 80 and drank the blood of blood drinkers, she reached for his hand and, if he would allow, took and squeezed it.

"Thanks.  I feel like knowing that-- all of it, is gonna save my life one day."


Kragen Kingsmith

Kragen is thankfully stopped, waiting at one of those infernally long red that downtowns are famous for. His hands are white knuckle on the steering wheel as he waits, tense in the telling, but equally relieved to do so. To be able to properly prepare Molly for the realm she was so obviously becoming embroiled in. But then there is a moment of tender surprise. Molly's hand came up and took his, and he let his hand fall from the steering wheel with surprise and those grey eyes turned upward moving from the hand, to the eyes of the woman giving it that gentle, reassuring squeeze.

She thanks him, tells him he may have just saved her life. It brought an eventual smile to his lips, one that almost approached that rictus as he chuckled. "I hope it to be true dear Molly, but I fear all I've done is taken off your blinder's and let you see a little bit more of the whole, terrifying vista."

He purses his lips briefly, perhaps shocked at his loose tongue with so little gain, he WAS a mercenary after all, and he was gaining nothing from revealing this, except potential trouble for himself. But he went on to offer.

"My work, as you can guess is violent and dangerous." He says tentatively. "I ask you this only because your involved now, because you know the dangers. I need a medic, someone who I can turn too if things go from sublime to subpar as they so often do.." He says looking pointedly at her. "I can offer you information, more of it in exchange for that service...if you want...I can offer you even more then that."

He starts to drive once more then, his hand withdrawn to guide the steering wheel as they turn onto Molly's street, her building only a few blocks away. "What do you say Miss Molly, how does that suit you?"


Molly Toombs

His hand had been glued to the steering wheel, so she'd touched fingertips to the backs of his knuckles to catch his attention, to let him know what she was trying to do.  He complied, moved his hand from the steering wheel, and for a brief span in time their hands were wrapped up together over the center console.

He confessed that he didn't believe he saved her, simply that he opened her eyes.  "Well, it's appreciated regardless," she told him.

Then he had a question for her.  A request, an offer, maybe even a job if you looked at it that way. The light turned, he let go of her hand and grasped the steering wheel again, and wanted to know in so many words if she would be his medic for when things with his rather violent job when awry.  She contemplated this for a moment, and settled both of her hands into her lap once more.

"This turn," she directed at first, and then went on to respond to his request.

"I can't have police come knocking at my door, but from what I understand you've never really been tied down to any of your pieces of work.  If you can keep me from getting a warrant out for my arrest?  I can help you if and when you need it.  I don't plan on quitting my job at the hospital and coming to work for you or anything like that?  But if you need someone to patch you up and make sure you won't bleed out, or something like that?  I'll lend my know-how.  As for repayment?  We'll see how much you need my help and how much that puts me at risk.  Right now I'm happy to call it even-- you've helped me tonight, told me things you didn't need to, and have me better prepared to keep myself taken care of now."

After the next turn, she'd gesture to a five-story brick building on the next corner.  It had old stone stairs leading up to white wooden double doors, and a sign over the doorway that says 'Brookstone', black letters painted onto faded white wood.  "Here's home."


Kragen Kingsmith

It wasn't a yes, not in the fullest sense, but it also wasn't a no. It was the smart answer, the answer that had addendum's and catches. Molly was looking out for herself, and that simple thing seemed to ease Kragen's tensions far more then hand holding or anything else that could have happened.

He feels these things, feels the lose of tension in his mind and his hands and he offered her that rictus grin, the one he wore when he was in his element and he chuckled happily with a nod. "Good for you Miss Molly, good for you. Stand for yourself, not for others. If you'd asked me to quit my job, I'd have smelled a rat as well." He tapped the side of his nose and waggled his brows.

"Under the counter is better for both of us regardless, less of a trail, less of a target. I've kept myself out of jail because of those idea's. I'd like to say I'll do the same for you." 

He pulls over then, Looking up at the five story building and considered amusingly. "An old brownstone." He said with a pleasant nod. "A classic, not unlike yourself dear Molly." He said as he put the car in park and turned towards her, a guaging look in his eye that told her he wasn't quite done.

"I have one...more thing to offer Molly, one more bit of ammunition for your newly acquired mental weaponry." He offers as he unbuckles his seat belt and leaned slightly towards her. "The vampires will use their blood as a trap, a beautiful guilded trap to keep you in. But, you can exist without a leash, without a master." He offers. "I do it, several of my associates do it as well. If you believe this trap may soon come to fall over you, to hold you forever. I can offer you the way to break their monopoly...vampiric blood...without a master." He makes this offer now, one that might make her assume he believes that her ghouling was inevitable, but he adds, at the end.

"Its a dirty offer, a trap all its own, a trap I hope you can avoid. But I offer you the trap by your own hand...rather then by another."


Molly Toombs

If there's ever anything to be said at the end of the day about Molly, it was one thing.  Not that she was a nurse, not that she was a classic example of womanhood.  Not that she was caring or warm or soft.  Not that she was beautiful, not that she was strong, not that she was loud or quiet or assertive or passive or anything else.

Above all else, Molly was smart.

So, naturally, she answered not with a simple yes or no.  She wouldn't agree to anything without details, and even when she had details she knew better than to give an outright 'yes', because there could be other things that were left out.  So she agreed with her own conditions, and Kragen appreciated that.  It relieved him to know that the woman was smart and aware of how to look out for herself-- that was a comfort, because the path she was walking was one littered with traps and lures that would lead her astray and seek to harm her.

He agreed to her conditions, but when they pulled over he had one thing to add-- an offer.  And if she understood him correctly, it was to be like him.  Ghouled, but with no master.  She'd unbuckled her seatbelt when the car stopped and leaned down to collect her umbrella, but paused when he'd turned to her and leaned in some and made such a dark temptation of a chance.  The way she watched him wasn't with distrust, not the same way that she watched vampires when she spoke with them.  Rather, it was with some small bit of what might be pity, given the way that her eyebrows stitched together.

"Well, that answers my question about who you're... bound to, I guess is how you'd say that.  It seems the answer is no one, or yourself maybe."  All the same, she shook her head and lifted a hand to tuck her hair behind one ear.  "I appreciate the offer and what you're trying to do by extending it, Kragen, really I do.  But I don't want that for myself.  Not unless I have to, unless Flood or another tries to make a move and I'm left with no other choice.

"And I figure you'll know when I have no other choice."  She smiled now, breaking the tension in the car between them-- or trying to, anyways.  "You're going to be coming calling when Flood starts getting you in trouble, I expect."


Kragen Kingsmith

"Soon enough I suspect, ahh the joys of killing monsters for other monsters." He says with a chuckle as he unlocks the door, letting Molly know without saying it that she's free to leave whenever she wishes. 

"And I hope against hope that you avoid the trap dear Molly, I hope you traverse the trails of darkness and bare witness to the fruits of this sordid world without becoming one of those fruits for another to pluck. But let my offer stand as your last resort against the chains of false love and eternal devotion." Its almost lyrical what he says, as if it might be a poem. But then that rictus grin comes back and he tilted his head.

"Besides, you'd make a horrible servant. To much backbone." 


Molly Toombs

She couldn't help but laugh, even if only a little, when he explained why she would be a terrible servant.  Oh, how correct he was.

The doors unlocked, and Molly adjusted her posture within the seat and reached for the door handle.  Before getting out, she added:  "I've still got your phone number.  When I get inside I'll send it a text-- I assume it's a cellphone.  That way you'll have my number on file for when you need it.

"You know, per our agreement."  She grinned and opened the door and stepped out onto the curb.  She'd lean down to look into the car one last time, and said:  "Goodnight, Kragen.  Thank you for everything."

And then she'd close the door, wave, and make her way up the stairs to her building to call it a night.

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