[open] a friend in need's a friend indeed
Who: Ned and OPEN
What: Random encounters & fallout from dream-walking tomfoolery
Where: House 20, the garden, anywhere around town
When: Day 89
It's been a long week. A long, mostly-sleepless, weird week during which Ned has seen far more of his friends' and neighbors' subconsciouses than he would have liked to. Plus, a creepy city made of crystals that everyone seems to have seen, but no one will claim as their own. Shady stuff. Today, he is determined to wear himself out. Perhaps if he's tired enough, whatever mojo the men behind the curtain have put on him won't be strong enough to stir him out of a deep and dreamless sleep.
It's probably a futile tactic, but he can't just do nothing.
So he is a bustle of activity - cleaning the house, walking around town, checking on the crops to see if they are holding up well (carefully, with an eye for any enterprising tigers roaming too close to the edge of the forest), keeping an eye out for new faces and an ear out for rumors of missing ones.
What: Random encounters & fallout from dream-walking tomfoolery
Where: House 20, the garden, anywhere around town
When: Day 89
It's been a long week. A long, mostly-sleepless, weird week during which Ned has seen far more of his friends' and neighbors' subconsciouses than he would have liked to. Plus, a creepy city made of crystals that everyone seems to have seen, but no one will claim as their own. Shady stuff. Today, he is determined to wear himself out. Perhaps if he's tired enough, whatever mojo the men behind the curtain have put on him won't be strong enough to stir him out of a deep and dreamless sleep.
It's probably a futile tactic, but he can't just do nothing.
So he is a bustle of activity - cleaning the house, walking around town, checking on the crops to see if they are holding up well (carefully, with an eye for any enterprising tigers roaming too close to the edge of the forest), keeping an eye out for new faces and an ear out for rumors of missing ones.
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He give Ned a grin and starts heading back into the town.
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With Meyer, it had seemed not only as if he didn't want Ned speaking about his relationship with Charlie to others, but as if he didn't want to discuss it with Ned to any degree whatsoever. Will the same be true of Charlie?
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"Couple'a years? Three, maybe four."
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It might not be exactly the same as the secret that he'd been carrying around with him those twenty years, but Ned knows that, when the first person (River, he thinks) found out, it had been surprisingly nice to just.. talk about his powers, on a very basic level.
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"Dunno, just kinda happened, y'know? We was at Meyer's place, just drinking and talking and shit and he just fucking kissed me." Or maybe he kissed him, the details are a little fuzzy. "I'd never really thought much abouts him like that before. More'n anyone else, anyways. I known the guys since he was a kid, y'know? But it was nice, and I figured I wanted to do it again."
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Charlie doesn't make much of the story, but Ned thinks it is rather sweet. It must have taken a certain amount of courage, as far as he's concerned. That sort of thing was plenty emotionally complicated in his own time, but in theirs it was more than that. It was a real risk. Was illegal, as far as he knows.
That thought leads him to another, and to another, so that he asks, "If the stuff I saw in his dreams was true... was yours? I mean, about being in prison?" There's something obviously tentative in his voice; he doesn't want to overstep his bounds. Ned holds open the door for Charlie, is glad to see that the bar is unoccupied.
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"They only kept me in for four days. That was how long it took for them to do the autopsy and realize he'd shot himself and I'd just... found the body."
Which is his way of saying that his half of the dream had been real, too. Four days is nothing compared to six months, of course, but it had seemed plenty long to Ned, at that age, terrified that they were never going to let him out again.
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Ned pours himself a shot of the brandy (that was the handiest glass, and he doesn't think Charlie's going to judge him for using the wrong cup) and one for Charlie, too. "There was another boy, Eugene. He was-" Ned hesitates, just for a moment, "- a friend of mine. We were together when we found the guy, but they let him out after a couple of hours. His parents kicked up a fuss."
Down the hatch with the brandy.
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"Here's to fucking connections, huh? Hope that kid fucking grew up appreciating that shit." He remembers enough about what Ned told him about his own childhood, growing up in the boys' school. Seems like getting left in a jail cell as a fucking kid lines up with that.
He clinks glasses with him and downs his second shot, making a face right afterwards. "Jesus that stuff if fucking shit."
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It doesn't surprise him that Charlie would think of that anecdote in terms of connections - the social and legal usefulness of having parents to come and cause trouble until their son was released from his unjust imprisonment. That was the moment in Ned's life when he, too, had realized that there was more than an emotional impact to his abandonment. That his father forgetting about him would mean that he'd have to fend for himself, legally, economically, and in all the other ways that he barely understood at that age.
"I hope he did, too. I don't really know where he ended up. He stopped talking to me a little while after that." There is still a sweet burn in his mouth and throat from the brandy, rather like cough syrup. Ned smacks his lips together and gives a little shake of his head. Better than nothing, though. He goes on with his story, because Charlie doesn't seem to mind, and because that's what friends do, right? They have conversations about stupid things like brief childhood friendships that ended catastrophically, "I was a bit of an idiot when I was a kid. Jumped in a pile of dead leaves, he saw them come back to life. Pretty sure he thought I was some kind of circus freak after that, but he didn't tell anyone, which was lucky for me."
Ned drinks his second shot, too, and winces at the taste. "It's certainly... potent."
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He keeps routing around behind the bar, but everything that's left was really left for a reason. There's not much else but weird flavoured vodkas and drink mixers. Creme de Menthe? Really? People still drink that shit?
"This place just keeps getting better and fucking better. First we got no fucking smokes and now the booze is running outs. Even back home it ain't this bleak." He holds up a bottle of what appears to be bubblegum flavoured vodka and shudders.
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"You're right, though. I did say I was a bit of an idiot," he says. Thinks privately that he still is. After all, he's making the decision to keep drinking, sliding his shot-glass over towards Charlie to try some of the bubblegum vodka, because why not? It's hard to imagine it being worse than the cherry shit.
As for the booze situation, Ned merely shrugs. He's less worried about that than he is about the food supply, "Maybe we'll have to start making our own. You know how to do that?"
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He pours them both a shot of the hideous vodka and slides it down the bar to Ned. He's waiting for you to try this one first, pal.
"Naw. AR, the guy I worked for, he weren't interested in the home brewed moonlight shit. He were in the importing business. More of the stills was happening in Jersey."
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The flavored vodka, when he downs it, is even worse than the brandy had been. If he were a better actor he would pretend it wasn't that bad, just to see the surprise and disgust on Charlie's face, but he's not capable of that. Instead he immediately wrinkles his nose, starts looking for something to wash it down with. There's a sink behind the bar; Ned fills himself a glass of water and drinks it in two big gulps.
Meyer had never really said all that much about what sorts of things he and Charlie did back home, professionally. Apparently they are in the liquor business: unsurprising, considering the time period. "So he imports it, and you two... help with distribution?"
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That vodka really is hideous, and this is from someone who has partaken in his fair share of bathtub gin. Charlie screws his face up right away. "Jesus fucking christ, people pay money for this shit?"
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"Probably better if you mix it with something," Ned theorizes, getting up and rifling around behind the bar, looking at his options. He's never worked as a bartender, but he's not exactly averse to trying his hand with a bit of experimentation. There's a single can of lemon-lime soda behind the counter, and a half-empty bottle of grenadine. He sets out two bigger glasses, splits the soda between the two, adds a splash of the grenadine and an amount of the cotton candy vodka. He swirls his around, sips, adds a bit more vodka, sips again.
"Better this way," he says, tipping a bit more vodka into Charlie's, mixing it, and sliding it over to him.
"So what're speakeasys like? Is it all secret back rooms and passwords and flappers, like in the movies?"
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"Back rooms of stores it were, mostly. And more full a people you really don't wants to fucking piss off."
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He drinks some more of the vodka mixture, thinking that it's not nearly so noxious, when it's a mixed with a few other things. Part of him wishes he could have seen it: the speakeasies, the old cars, the glamor of that era. But he has seen it - at least, glimpsed it - in those few dreams of Meyer's. And what he'd seen had been exciting, yes, but also terrifying. There's a very real chance, he supposes, that that last nightmare of Meyer's will come true, that he and Charlie will end up on their knees in some squalid warehouse, surrounded by men with guns and very few compunctions about using them.
"I don't know what people were thinking, with the whole Prohibition thing. It was never going to work in the long term. I don't even drink that often and even I know that." He's starting to feel the effects of the alcohol, now, a hint of heat in his cheeks.
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"So this guy you work for, AR. What's he like?" This isn't the first time Charlie's mentioned him, and Ned is curious to hear more about the life that he and Meyer left behind when they were brought here. Then, because he knows Charlie might not really be used to people asking questions about his boss, he adds, "I mean, telling me can't do any harm, can it, it's not like I'm even from the same century."
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"He's a gambler, mostly. Best fucking gambler you ever fucking seen, you know. Ain't never won a pool game against him he weren't letting me win." He rolls the glass in his fingers, staring morosely. "He fixed the 1919 world series."
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When Charlie says he fixed the world series Ned goes still a moment, a furrow forming between his brows. "Actually you know I think... maybe I've heard of him, too. At least, that sounds familiar."
He interprets Charlie's new rather melancholy bent to merely missing his boss, so he asks, "How does one even go about doing something like that? Fixing a spots game, I mean. Did he just... pay the players?"
haha I guess Ned has read The Great Gatsby
"I mainly just do as he says, y'know? But he's a billion fucking times better to work for than those fucking Mustache Pete bosses run the other half of New York. Arrogant pieces of shit think they God's gift to the fucking Earth, y'know?"
YEP
good on ya, Ned
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