#had to nearly throw down with kasimir to keep it
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raviollies · 1 year ago
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Letter from the past
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engagemy-others · 3 years ago
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Fuckt Up Lil Bros Intro:
a fic that won't get finished so I'm putting it here
When Wylan was eight, his father had finally gotten fed up with him, and had packed Wylan and his mother into a car and taken them to see a specialist. His mother had argued the whole way there, saying Wylan would learn to read when he felt like it, that the strange outbursts would end eventually. After all, Wylan was a child! Children were unpredictable, at best, she’d said. Stubborn. His father had growled something under his breath, along the lines of Wylan being less stubborn and more of a problem.
Then they had walked away from the specialist hours later, and his father berated his mother, throwing all those words she’d said back in her face. Wylan didn’t quite understand, especially not when his father had slammed the car door shut and called Wylan something that Wylan wouldn’t realise until much later was a disgusting, horrible word. His mother had already known, and she had hissed at him to not say such things.
“He’s our son,” she’d said.
“Not mine,” his father had said. “Not if he’s like this. My genes wouldn’t pass this on.”
“Jan Van Eck,” she snapped.
“Your father was always strange,” he said. “Maybe this is from him.”
“I don’t care who this came from,” she said. “It doesn’t matter. He’s still your son. None of this matters.”
“How can this not matter?” he demanded. “He can’t read, Marya. He’s socially inept, and he will evidently remain so for the rest of his life. He’s not normal. He’s not right.”
And she had murmured something lowly and dangerously, something Wylan couldn’t hear from the back. It had shut his father up, though.
Wylan was both too young to understand and too old not to understand words like “dyslexia” and “autism” and “severe anxiety” and whatnot. Looking back on it, it didn’t matter if he knew what it was or not. All that had mattered was the noticeable change in his father’s behaviour to him.
That had also been when all the therapies started. Physical, to get him over how awkward his body was. Occupational, to stop him from getting upset about “minor things.” Speech, in hopes that it would help the reading. Tutoring, because that should have helped the reading. Drugs, to stop him from being timid all of the time.
He hadn’t needed most of those; the most use they gave was to keep his father hoping that he could someday “get better” until they ultimately proved ineffective to his standards. Granted, the medications would continue to help throughout his life, just not the way Jan Van Eck had thought they would.
If Wylan had to pinpoint where his life had gone to hell, it would be that moment he stepped in the car to go to that specialist.
Though, if he had to pick a second point, it would be months later, when his mother had died. He didn’t get to go to the funeral. That was when things had gotten worse from his father, with his mother no longer around to mitigate, to stick up for Wylan. His father started hiding him then, keeping his contact with the world as minimal as possible. He had his therapies, he had his tutoring, he had whatever nannies his father hired, and he had the occasional parties he couldn’t get away from.
He hated those parties. They were loud, and everyone always bothered him, and the food was gross, and his father always yelled at him later for acting like a fool and disgracing the Van Eck name.
The third hellish point in his life, though, was the moment that “Van Eck” ceased to have meaning at the end of Wylan’s name. He could no longer disgrace the name, if the name no longer signified his ties to Jan Van Eck.
Perhaps he should have been happy. He no longer had those parties, no longer had those therapies and tutors, no longer had his raging father. He was free of it all.
But he wasn’t happy. Mostly, he was just… scared.
Wylan hadn’t even known he had second cousins twice-removed until the day he’d been disowned. Maybe that would have been obvious to most people, but his father had cut ties with most of his family. Wylan was certain the only people Jan Van Eck was legally related to anymore was Alys, his new (and insanely young) wife, and their future child (the reason Wylan was finally let loose).
After a long taxi ride, oh-so graciously paid for by his father thanks to Alys’s bleeding heart, Wylan had enough time to fully terrify himself with catastrophic thoughts of what these “cousins” would be like. Jordan Rietveld and Kasimir Brekker could possibly be worse than his father. Hell, the name of the second one sounded intimidating enough.
Wylan spent a short while wondering why they had separate names if they were full-blooded brothers. He’d asked, but at that point, his father had stopped bothering with him altogether, and had walked away halfway through Wylan’s question.
The cab driver said something, but Wylan had lost himself so deep in thought that he couldn’t catch what the man had said.
“Sorry?”
“Five minutes,” the cab driver grunted.
“Oh. Thank you.”
And Wylan sank into his seat, panic beginning to eat him alive.
Wylan had only three bags with him. Two were packed with the essentials: clothes. Just clothes. Well, and the remnants of this month’s medications. But other than that, it was his sweaters and shirts and jeans and underwear and socks and two pairs of shoes. And that was all. The other case had been filled with things Wylan had snuck with him. Paints and easels and canvases and brushes and pens and charcoals and pencils and his flute. He had no clue if his father would’ve let him take them, so he’d hid them in the suitcase and bolted before his father could inspect anything. Perhaps that had been pointless—Jan Van Eck had stopped looking at him the moment he’d announced Wylan would be disowned.
Two of those three suitcases were dropped unceremoniously on the side of the curb by the driver. Wylan had fortunately grabbed the bag filled with his supplies, so nothing broke when the bags thudded to the grass.
“Thank you,” Wylan said to the driver. “I’d tip if I could.”
The driver just shrugged. “Whatever, kid.”
Then he disappeared back into his cab and drove away. Wylan watched as the taxi turned the corner and disappeared, suddenly feeling his heart thud louder and faster than ever before. Everything felt both too real and too unreal at the same time.
“No panic attacks before noon,” he told himself quietly.
“Wylan?”
Wylan nearly jumped out of his skin, and his heart likewise nearly flew out of his chest. If pain was painless, that would be the feeling of his heartrate returning to the pace it had previously set before as Wylan tried to regain his breath.
He turned towards the voice, suddenly filled with so much anxiety that his stomach hurt.
Two people were just a short stretch down the sidewalk, slowly making their way over.
“Wylan Van Eck?” one of them asked, clearly the owner of the voice that had previously called for him.
“Yes,” Wylan said. He discreetly wiped his palms against his pants, trying to get the sweat off of them. “Hi. Um. Jordan and Kasimir?”
The speaker began laughing, and Wylan suddenly noticed his face. It was painted in large scars and marks, a patchwork masterpiece of pristine porcelain and burnt blemishes. They had no distinct pattern, and clearly did not hurt the man, as he smiled widely through them. Wylan did also note that the half-eyebrow missing did add a bit of intrigue to his face, but otherwise… well, Wylan averted his eyes. He found staring at people’s faces to be unbearably uncomfortable in the first place, but this just made it worse. He knew he shouldn’t look at all, really. Didn’t people always find that rude? But according to his father, Wylan not looking people in the eye was rude, too…
“It’s Kaz,” said the second person, his voice harsher than rock grating rock.
He had no scars on his face—which seemed young and fresh, making him seem hardly older than Wylan, despite the hardened lines of his permanent scowl. Either that, or he already despised Wylan. Neither seemed favourable. Perhaps his taxi-ride fears weren’t totally unfounded.
But what stood out more to Wylan was the cane he leant heavily upon.
Jesus Christ, Wylan thought to himself. No wonder Jan Van Eck had never mentioned being related to them before. If he had hated Wylan…
That was rude to think that, though. He shouldn’t think of how his father thought of things. His father’s view of the world was skewed. At best.
“If you call him Kasimir,” the first guy said, “he might kill you.”
Wylan glanced to the kid—Kaz—and then immediately dropped the gaze to the ground. The scowl had gotten deeper. Kaz did indeed look murderous.
“I’m Jordie,” said the first guy, his smile balancing Kaz’s serial killer glower. He stuck out his hand to Wylan. “Jordie Rietveld.”
“Wylan Van Eck,” Wylan said, shaking the preferred hand.
“We know,” said Kaz. He did not offer his hand for Wylan to shake. Wylan noted the dark leather gloves that covered his hands. Interesting, especially when balanced with Kaz’s otherwise dark and grim attire.
Jordie, on the other hand, wore a white t-shirt and faded jeans, looking like a completely normal person. And the lack of near loathing on his face made him preferrable to Wylan. Even if Kaz wanted to kill him, perhaps Jordie wouldn’t hate him.
Not until he learned how much of a fuck-up Wylan was, anyway.
“So, you’re our cousin,” Jordie said conversationally. His eyes searched Wylan’s face, perhaps trying to find the similarities there.
“Not that we knew it,” Kaz said, his rasping voice filled with an unamused tone. Everything about Kaz screamed “unamused,” really.
Jordie coughed loudly. Kaz glanced over to him, something temporarily erasing the annoyance on his face. But then Jordie send Kaz a meaningful look of some sort, and the look returned to Kaz.
“Sorry,” Jordie said.
“No, it’s okay,” Wylan said quickly. “I didn’t know either.”
“Hm,” Kaz said.
“Anyway,” Jordie said, raising his voice somewhat. It reminded Wylan somewhat of whenever Wylan dared speak in his father’s presence at one of those parties, when his father would speak right over him to draw attention away from Wylan. Hiding his screwed-up son. But Jordie didn’t seem… well, Wylan couldn’t say that for sure. He had just met the man. But he did seem to only be doing it for Wylan’s sake, to keep Kaz’s irritation at bay. Again, Wylan couldn’t tell for sure, though. Only time would tell, he supposed. “I suppose… welcome.”
“Thanks,” Wylan said.
“Shouldn’t ‘welcome’ wait until he has actually seen the apartment?” Kaz asked dryly.
“Right,” Jordie said, frowning and blinking. “Right, yeah, that would…”
He trailed off, staring somewhere off in the distance. Then he shook his head, looking back to Wylan.
“Would you like to come inside?” he asked.
“Sure,” Wylan said, because what the hell else was he supposed to say? Someone different could have perhaps found something far more eloquent to say, but Wylan was not someone different. He was unfortunately just Wylan.
“Great,” Jordie said, smiling once more.
He bent down and grabbed one of Wylan’s clothes bags before Wylan could take them himself. Wylan shouldered his supply bag, ready to grab the last bag, but Kaz had already taken it. Guilt rumbled through Wylan’s chest. They shouldn’t help him. They’d already burdened themselves with taking him in; they shouldn’t add more to that. But Jordie had already begun walking away, towards the apartment complex Wylan now bothered to look at. Kaz was directly behind him, limping even worse than before. Wylan’s guilt likewise compacted.
The apartment complex looked… to be fair to the place, it wasn’t the worst place Wylan had seen. He’d seen way worse on his drive over here. But it was rather bad. The white paint had lost most of its life, living a now grim existence as faded yellow ivory. The windows and their sills looked old. That was the most Wylan could say about them. And the fire escapes everywhere looked rusty and rickety. Wylan wouldn’t trust those with his life. He hoped he’d never have to.
Jordie unlocked a side door to the place, then pushed through. Kaz followed, hands too busy with bag and cane to hold it open for Wylan, who had to rush to make sure he wasn’t locked out.
Inside looked about as dreary as out—old, matted carpet covered the stairs that lead to all of the floors, and decaying plant matter and dirt tracks and bug remnants scattered across the tile landing. The popcorn walls had crumbling and faded paint, much like the outer walls.
“Oh, boy,” Jordie said up front. “Here we go.”
Then he mounted the first stair with a sigh. Wylan frowned, wondering what that was about.
He figured it out after the first flight.
“Inhaler,” Kaz said, almost bored, as Jordie wheezed and coughed, leaning against the wall.
Jordie nodded, shouldering Wylan’s bag so he could root around his pockets. He pulled out a white and blue inhaler, popping the cap off as he began to shake it.
“I can take my bag back,” Wylan said, now feeling another layer of guilt. “You don’t have to carry it.”
Holding his breath as he removed the inhaler nozzle from his lips, Jordie shook his head. Kaz just scowled over his shoulder at Wylan, his cane held horizontally in the same hand that held Wylan’s bag as the other hand clung to the railing.
All of this burden they placed on themselves, only for them to sooner or later realise that they wasted it when he showed them just how useless he was.
They had to go quite slowly after that, but they eventually made it to the correct floor. The Rietveld apartment (Wylan assumed it was under the Rietveld name, anyway; Jordie was the older of the two, and Wylan was now dead certain Kaz was near his age) was the first door off the staircase. Convenient, in a small way. Not convenient that the place had no elevators, but Wylan wasn’t about to ask why they lived here and not a more accessible place. There was a reason why people lived in a place like this: money (or the lack thereof).
“Home, sweet home,” Jordie said, unlocking the door to the apartment.
Wylan’s first thought was: It’s bare.
His second thought was: It’s small.
The living space held a crackling old leather sofa, a brown corduroy reclining chair, a coffee table scattered with dents and mail, and flatscreen TV. The TV was the only thing that looked remotely new; Wylan suspected the rest were either hand-me-downs or thrifted.
Beyond that lay a kitchen, removed from the living room by only an island bar. It had space for a refrigerator, oven and stove, sink, and a small stretch of countertop that was surrounded by cupboards and drawers. If all three of them stood in that room, Wylan figured, it would become quite crowded.
He couldn’t see the rest of the place, but a hall led away from beside the kitchen. That likely held the bedrooms and bathroom, and whatever else could possibly be in this small place.
Jordie dropped Wylan’s bag on the sofa. Kaz set the other beside it, continuing to walk until he disappeared down the hall.
“Don’t mind him,” Jordie said, not once losing his cheer. “He’s always a grump.”
“Oh,” Wylan said, unsure what else to say.
“Anyway, this is it,” Jordie said. He began gesturing around the place. “Living room, kitchen… down the hall’s going to be your bedroom on the left. Me and Kaz’ll sleep together in the other one. Bathroom is last door on the left. Um… yeah. That’s about it.” He turned to Wylan, smiling ruefully. “Yeah. It’s not much, but it’s home.”
“It’s… nice,” Wylan supplied.
Jordie laughed. “You’re funny. No, it’s okay. You don’t have to lie. This place is a shithole.”
Wylan wouldn’t have put it like that, but yes. He’d seen the hole in that one cupboard, the chunk missing from the faux marble island counter, the dents in the wall, the crack in that corner of the ceiling…
“It’s not so bad,” Wylan said, generously.
“It’s cheap,” Jordie said, placing his hands on his hips and surveying the ceiling. Oh. Another crack. “That’s what it is.”
“Oh.”
“So,” Jordie said, looking down at Wylan. “Want to see your new room?”
Wylan shrugged. “Sure.”
This time, he managed to grab both cases of clothes before Jordie could reach them. Wylan’s arms felt like they were being torn off, but at least Jordie wasn’t burdening himself for Wylan. Plus, the short hall was nothing like that staircase.
Jordie led him through the hall, pushing open a door with a hole in a conspicuously shoulder-height place. Wylan eyed that warily until the door had swung fully open.
If the rest of the apartment was barren and small, then this was… Wylan didn’t even know the words.
The walls were popcorn white—as with the rest of the place—but they were studded with holes of previous tenants nails and tacks. Nothing lay on the walls currently other than those holes. There was a bed pressed against the back right corner, taking up most of the space. Half of the bed rested below the window (which seemed to lead to this apartment’s fire escape). Another large portion of the space was taken up by a dresser and desk combination. A small stool went along with it, tucked beneath the desk portion. And in the far corner across from the bed, a shallow cut-out of space denoted a closet.
“Used to be my room,” Jordie said. “But I’m in with Kaz now.”
“Oh…” Was there anything that wouldn’t make Wylan feel like guilt was piled so high atop him that he might sink beneath the ground?
“I assume you don’t have a toothbrush or shampoo or anything?” Jordie asked.
“Um, no,” Wylan said.
Jordie nodded. “Thought not. Well, you can use mine for the time being. Shampoo, anyway. Please don’t use my toothbrush.” Wylan managed a feeble smile as Jordie grinned broadly at him. “Use your finger, or something.”
“I do, um…” Wylan fumbled to find the right words. “I have some medications… I don’t know where—”
“Medicine cabinet’s behind the mirror,” Jordie said quickly. “You might have to rearrange a few things to get your stuff in there, though.”
“Oh. Sorry.”
“For what?” Jordie asked.
“Moving your stuff around, I guess.”
Jordie frowned strangely at him. “I toldyou to do it. You don’t have to apologise. Hell, you haven’t even done it yet.”
Wylan pulled his lips into his mouth, biting them together. Jordie studied him for a short while longer, then shook his head to himself. The easy smile returned to Jordie’s face.
“I’ll leave you to unpack, then,” Jordie said. “Oh, and we’ll get you those supplies tomorrow. Or sometime soon.”
Then he disappeared out of the room. The door creaked as it swung most of the way shut behind him. For reasons he couldn’t begin to fathom, that summed up exactly how Wylan felt.
Wylan didn’t have hangers for his clothes, he discovered.
“Oh,” he said to himself. “Okay. Um.”
He refolded the sweater he had just pulled from one of the bags, then shoved it back inside. He zipped the bag back up. With any luck, the clothes wouldn’t get all wrinkled. He highly doubted that this place had an iron.
The dresser, he figured, would likely only need to house his underwear and socks. Those could all get tossed in the same drawer. Thus, he could appoint all the other drawers for his art supplies.
Organising those drawers gave him a good hour of clear headspace. He organised them one way before deciding he didn’t like that, then started over.
When he had nearly finished with the drawers, he stopped, staring at the oil paint tubes in his hand.
Why was he doing this? He had no right to. He shouldn’t be here. He didn’t belong here, for any number of reasons. This wasn’t his place. He couldn’t be a burden on two other people—people who looked like they had enough burdens of their own to bear. Yet, here he was, unloading all of the life he could carry into drawers and closets that weren’t his.
Ungracefully, he dumped the paints back in his bag, followed by all of the other supplies he had just spent forever organising. The only thing he left in the drawers was his canvases. Those shouldn’t get tossed around so much. He only had five; he had to treat them with care. He could spare exactly none of them.
He nearly jumped out of his skin when a loud cough came from somewhere outside of the door. It hit him, moments later, that he had dimly heard coughing in the background for a few minutes now. But that particular cough was unexpected. And quite horrible.
Wylan moved to the door, cracking it open. He saw a dark head of hair outside, bent over as another cough came. Jordie’s head raised, elbow pressed against his mouth as he coughed again.
“Wy—” a cough cut him off for a moment “—lan.”
He shook his head, then dropped his elbow to reach into his pocket and grabbed his inhaler. Wylan looked away as he primed and then used the inhaler. It was awkward, watching him… well. It was just an intrusion, wasn’t it? And rude. Nobody was supposed to stare at anyone different. Not Kaz’s cane and limp, not Jordie’s scars, not this.
“Sorry,” Jordie said a minute later.
Wylan heard the click of something closing, and he looked up to see Jordie capping the inhaler and ramming it in the pocket of his jeans. Jordie had an amiable smile on his face.
“Asthma,” he said, as if the coughing had been merely some bug he’d swatted away.
“I’m sorry,” Wylan said.
Jordie waved a dismissing hand. “Don’t. I get enough of that in my life.”
“Sorry.”
“Well, that’s new.” Jordie’s smile had broken wider, genuine and confused amusement splitting his face. “An apology. For an apology.”
Wylan tried another, “Sorry?”
“Are you kidding? I haven’t had an actual apology in this house in…” He trailed off with another disregarding wave, but Wylan got the point. Kaz didn’t seem to be the relenting and apologetic type. “Anyway. I came to ask…”
Wylan watched him, waiting for the question. Jordie simply frowned. He looked over to the wall for a second.
“What was I going to ask?” he murmured to himself. “Shit.”
Unsure of this new situation, Wylan felt his fingers fumble for the fabric of his shirt’s hem. Jordie kept frowning at the wall, his teeth gnawing at his bottom lip as he concentrated.
“Jordie?” Wylan asked after what seemed like too long.
Jordie’s head snapped back to Wylan, frown deeper for a split second. Then it erased, reverting to an apologetic smile. “Sorry. I can’t remember what I was going to ask.”
Wylan knew that feeling all too well, but something about the way Jordie had zoned out bothered him.
Suddenly, Jordie snapped loudly, his index finger pointing to Wylan. Startled, Wylan drew back somewhat.
“Dinner,” Jordie said, amusement lighting his face once more. “Dinner. I was going to ask about dinner.”
Still uncertain, Wylan merely stared at Jordie.
“What do you like to eat?” Jordie asked. Before Wylan could even begin to think how to answer that, Jordie said, “We don’t do fancy rich people stuff, though. We’re cheap.”
“Oh. I didn’t… I mean, I’m not… you don’t have to worry about that,” Wylan said, words stumbling ungracefully. “You can just… make whatever you want, I guess.”
“Okay, I’ve heard that before, and that never goes over well,” Jordie said. “Nina’s the only person that has ever worked for.”
Wylan did not know who Nina was, but he still felt guilt gnawing at him. He really did not want to make Jordie change whatever meal he had planned.
“Seriously, it’s okay,” Jordie said. “Just tell me so that you don’t starve and then I don’t have the police investigating me.”
Wylan blinked.
“That was a joke,” Jordie said. He waited a second longer, expecting Wylan’s laughter. Wylan managed a grimaced smile. “Okay. No jokes. Um. Fine. Look. This is what we eat on a regular basis. Chinese takeout. Pizza. Uh. Boxed noodles. Frozen vegetables. Any easily-heated meal. Any of that repulsive to you?”
Truth be told, Wylan wasn’t entirely sure. He’d never had boxed noodles before. Or easily-heated meals. He knew he didn’t like most vegetables—they all reeked or had unpleasant textures (broccoli being the worst offender of all)—but maybe frozen made them different?
“No,” Wylan said. Even he could tell he sounded unconvincing.
“Fine,” Jordie said. “We’ll start with pizza. Nobody hates pizza.” He turned and walked away then, grumbling under his breath, “Not even Kaz.”
Wylan slowly closed the door, utterly confused by that entire encounter.
(and this is all I have written lmao sorryyyyyy)
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hereliesbitches--me · 5 years ago
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New York, 9:58am 
Too damn early to be suited up and sweaty, but in the city that never sleeps, it was just a regular Tuesday morning.
At 6 am she got the call for a presence to get the team,  by 7 am it's the hunt as the city begins to bustle.  By 8 am they’re fighting against civilians to clear a scene.  By 8:30 am, as organized as the rest of the city, their chimera of a beast makes an appearance right out from under the street and rips apart traffic in its grand entrance.  Nearly 2 hours of chasing, corralling, and fighting the thing, a rotting corpse lay with its insides steaming in the streets just as the sunlight starts bleeding between the narrow ways of skyscrapers and apartment buildings.  And did it smell bad. 
     Luckily, it seemed at this point New Yorkers had grown accustomed to the foul scents in this city, and the invasion of otherworldly things -- portals ripping open in the sky an aliens pouring out was still an event fresh in their memories, but at least this thing came out of the ground alone. The citizens were more pissed that their work route was delayed, more than the actual damage this thing had done. The path the demon had taken was through neighborhoods and building blocks already destroyed from the previous invasion, fortunately for all parties. It wouldn’t be too difficult for Rosie to clean up, only after she finds the source of the hole. 
“ All that fuss, just because of this lil’ thing?” Roxanne pink, clad in her vibrantly pink and black uniform, jabbed at the shriveled corpse that lay bleeding out in the steaming green guts. The corpse was barely recognizable, disfigured now that it was cut out of its rampaging vessel -- one could only guess it was some sort of man. He lay there gasping, fingerlike holes through his chest the shape of the piked stakes along Jacob’s mutated limb as he shook the rotting blood and gore from the bio weapon he called his arm. As the crowds gathered with phones out and news vans fight against the tide of morning rush hour, Jacob’s visible irritation worsened as he grunts and looks back at Roxanne,  “ Don’t get the blood on you. Quit pokin it, and get people to move back. Last thing we need are surprises.”           “ Wow Jacob, that's the most I’ve heard you talk in a while! ”
 To that, the giant ignored her. He passed around the rim before circling back to Rosie,   “ Can we go? ” 
    Hidden beneath her helmet, the miniature leader of the Angel project was wrapped up scanning the scene and trails when Jacob’s voice breaks her train of thought. The two were equally filthy, Jacob more so than herself as she looked him up and down,  “ I know you hate this part. You definitely look like you could use a shower... but, I need your help keeping back people from touching this crap until SHIELD shows up to finish cleaning it up.”   She turned her head to the others -- Kasimir already eagerly taking up conversations with reporters as they shoved microphones in his face, Jay slipping through the sludge and laughing when Ashley(Roxanne) shoved him down like two children playing in the snow. Fae and Lyak were at least helpful in trying to keep people away.  Rosie could only sigh in defeat.  Jacob growled and dipped his head away. Letting his mutation fade back, the sludge covered arm shifted back to that of a regular man.  People cleared it when he walked the edge, yet the brave ones were bold enough to still try to catch a photo of his scarred face as he pulled the hood over his head. 
SHIELD was sure taking their sweetass time in getting a team out here, but perhaps they were fighting traffic, Rosie reasoned. Or they were stretched thin cleaning up alien body parts over the past week.  The angel thought it best not to think too hard -- there was a bigger issue at hand. Focusing again, Sound fades from her senses and, trailing her memory back on the trail they ran, the charge in the air called her back to the hole of broken pipes and sewage the beast broke through in the first place.  Interesting… seems fitting , she shifted through the sludge carefully and raised her head. A sea of souls cloud her visions, the visor screen overloads with readings of faces, voices, and a in-pour of data; she has to take a step back, yet not even people can drown out the distinguished whistle repulsors iconic to only one ironclad, playboy billionaire inventor --
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“Stark…” The woman grimaced and looked up as the sensor’s warning system lit up her screen. “ Here’s our SHIELD agent, everybody. Nobody be alarmed!” Speak of the devil, and the devil will come. As if the flashing red and gold of Iron-man armor wasn't enough of a sign, all heads turn to the whooshing sound of rockets overhead before making his grand entrance was none other than the savior of the city himself. Boy, did the news outlets eat it up ----
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“ I’m afraid you’re late, Iron Man.  Big bad monster is already cut in pieces,” Rosie can hardly contain the teasing beneath her painfully sweet voice, trekking through the filth to meet the hero where he stands. She can already see how Jay, Ashley, and Kasimir’s eyes light up with wonder at the presents of an Avenger, though their leader is less than thrilled.  
“ No nukes to throw in holes, just more portals to close.” the cat reached out and patted his arm, metal claws clinking on metal   “ And that’ll be my job. If you could handle clean up,” her voice raises, like a hostess charming her guest,          “ That would be very much appreciated~”
(Starter for @starkarmored​ )
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