Log:Garreau-Fry B&E
Garreau-Fry B&E | |
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Lesson #1: It's So Much Worse Than You Think | |
Participants
Annapurna as ST. Franklyn, Jack, Plot:Whyte Out |
16 April, 2018 Franklyn and Jack break into Suzie Whyte's house to look for evidence -- and body parts like hair that witchy witches can use for, oh, brain breaking scrying in the kitchen while Jack gets eaten by ants in the basement. You know. The usual. |
Location
Suzie Whyte's House | |
"This is the best night for a break and entry. It's snowing and it's freezing." Jack points a finger at her. "If you try to hold this against me in the future, I will have Goblin chew up your shoes." The dog makes a surprised sound, ears lifting. Said and done - Jack changes clothes - ranger uniform doesn't do well for crime - and gathers up useful gear. They'll have to take his Ranger car but they'll park it somewhere not even close. On the way, he'll pump Franklyn for information - two Whytes, one dead, one kidnapped? He'll want to know more about that. Jack brings Goblin, cause Goblin makes for an excellent help.
Franklyn does a few thing: first, she texts someone. Bloody millennials. That done, she busies herself with getting some stuff from her car boot -- stuffed hastily into that big black carry all bag she never leaves home without. /This/ done, while Jack is getting ready Franklyn promptly excuses herself to the bathroom for a while. Like ten minutes. Women, am-I-rite?! When Franklyn emerges, she's got her red-and-black wool jacket, and grey scarf and blue lined jeans and black duck booties on -- hauling her bag over her arm, flicking her hair out of her eyes. It's pulled up in a braided bun and hidden under a black knit cap, now -- did she fix her lipstick? Is that what took her so long? "Okay Ranger Rick; here's the address." It's on a post-it note she passes over. What, no Google Maps?! Maybe the millennial isn't as app-happy as she looks -- or she knows enough about, well, tracking... "I'm going to smoke in your car. No butts there." Wait, like 'no buts' like no argument, or no butts like she's not gonna smoke at their destination? Franky's already giving Goblin a ruffle and heading out to whatever car Jack indicates. There's a pause, then she looks back over her shoulder. "...Why would you outsource that to Goblin? If you want to be petty and ruin my shoes, you should chew them yourself." Then into the car. Yeah. Frank'll smoke the whole way there - but at least she'll hold off on the sass for a while.
The drive is a winding one, through the increasingly woodsy area around Hart Pond. An area with which Jack would be quite intimately familiar, as a matter of fact, though Suzie's house is closer to the city side than the wilderness side. An advantage to thieves: the neighbours do have trees blocking direct view, and there's a fair amount of yard space to add distance. Identifying B&E experts will be difficult beyond general body type. A disadvantage: the house is, you know, WHITE. Dark bodies will show up clearly. It is a two-story house with an attic and a peaked grey shingled roof. On the ground floor, there is an east-facing front porch with a trellis and columns which could be climbed to reach the shingled roof. The porch is enclosed with broad sliding glass windows and screens. The door is locked. Within the porch are a few pieces of white-painted, age-worn wicker furniture and a low table with magazines and a few random belongings. The wall of the house has window, door, window. On the north side of the house is a small shed. The house itself has two bay windows on the ground floor, one which looks into an office of some sort, and one which has its curtains drawn. The second floor has three windows above a hip roof which provides the top of the bay windows below. One of those windows is suspiciously familiar to a certain witch. The hip roof could, with a bit of dangerous jumping, be accessed from the top of the porch roof.
The other side of the building is a straight, flat wall, with more gardens, vegetables here, if the yard ornaments of happy dancing peas and beans and pumpkins are to be believed, where the south-facing sunlight will fall on them longer during the day.
Really -looking-. Ocular patdown of the premises from the perimeter complete, Franklyn motions to the east side of the house -- away form the garage, towards the back. "That way." Like Jack doesn't know it. She continues, all confident - hell, she's moving in that direction already. Headstrong, this one - maybe just as stubborn as the Ranger here. "There." She says, moving to point towards the window which is suspiciously familiar. This done, she squints and back-traces the dim outline of the windows to the hip-roof to the porch. Lips are pursed. "...I've got some rope. You think that'll help, or like, do you just wanna get a boost up there and help drag me up?" Seriously. Franky sounds oddly, uh, confident? Ambitious. She sounds ambitious - whispering in the dim.
"Boost me - I'll pull you up. Probably less of a hassle," he whispers, nudging her to get into position so he can do just that. Not that he's super strong, but helping each other, they should be able to do this.
Like a shadow. Get it?! "Mmph." No words - Franklyn nudges back defiantly, but then scuttles over to where she's been told to be - moving to lace her fingers together, brace them on her thighs, and give a space for Jack to boost himself up onto the roof. What, did she train in circus arts or something?! Must've been a long time ago, because she's not -that- great at the old heave-ho. At least when Jack gets up on the slippery porch roof and eventually reaches for her, he's met with Franky leaping to get ahold of his hands and scramble up the side. She weighs practically nothing - no big deal. Once on the roof, Franky just... Well she's just trying to /remain/ on the roof now - looking to Jack, like any dude who spent any time patrolling NYC will know how to get into some dumb house in rural Vermont. After a moment, she points oh-so-helpfully to the 'right' window.
He nods and moves to the window and checks it - not locked. How convenient. He carefully pries it open using his hunter knife to get a wedge in first; he winces as it makes a bit of a sound, faint as it is: right now it sounds too loud. He sticks his head in and slides in if it's clear - but will wait just inside for Franklyn.
In the dark, it's hard to see her roll her eyes. But Franky does. But that exhilarated vibe... It's a little contagious. She creeps on along after Jack - letting him go first, eyeing this-way-and-that before following in after the Ranger. Well -- assuming he doesn't fall into a bear trap and immediately die, or something. Frank's all cautious like -- reaching into her bag, to take out... Is that a bug sweeper? Taken out, before the flashlight? Yup.
"Ohmygawd," Franky whisper-whines; can't she hear that amusement in Jack's voice? Doesn't she know not to fan the flames by engaging with the banter? "You don't even /know/, that's so rude - poisonous /how/? Like intoxicating and illuminating? It's all about /dosages/..." Chattebox slows her roll, a she squints in the dim and... Exchanges the bug sweeper for a little flashlight. Franklyn keeps the flashlight beam angled away from the window - moving to twitch back the curtains with a gloved hand. "...Look for her correspondence -- diary, letters, whatever." Does Frank share what she's looking for? Not, uh, exactly - but she's trying to find a vanity - check out a pillow - see if there's an en suite. Hair. People typically shed a lot of hair -- Franklyn's on the lookout for some, and it better not be a /cats/. A beat, then Frank says sadly - heading towards the vanity by the closet. "...She seemed cute. How old was she, again? Early twenties, right?"
The diary has a little lock on it.
Any photos of Suzie around? Anything else? Frank may not notice that diary yet; Jack would probably have an easier time spotting it, since the vanity has all sorts of things nabbing Frank's attention -- maybe there's lipstick, or other girly curios... Ooh, letters? Maybe something from her dad, or... "We've got time, right? I bet there's an office here, too..." Didn't Frank say she just needed to see Suzie's bedroom? What she after?
"We got time. Few hours?" He squints at her, turning the flashlight her way for a moment, before it hits the pages of the diary - he begins browsing through, particularly checking the last entries that assumedly are the ones she made before she disappeared.
There are photos of childhood, a young girl with a doting father, and no mother in the picture. The diary itself goes back years, entries short, almost telegrammatic. Sometimes a year goes by without any entries at all, and others, there are entries once a week, or daily. The most recent entries speak of ghosts, or speak TO ghosts, someone named Hannah, and mention that she thought she saw 'one of them' again, following her. The earliest reference to 'one of them' comes, as it so happens, BEFORE her father's murder, but the phrase is never fully explained. It is not always in the same context, does not always have anything to do with ghosts at all. It is always describing someone watching or following her while trying to remain unseen.
When Jack starts fidgeting with the diary, Franky abandons the old letters and postcards after noting the /locations/ from which they were sent - fingers twitching, some old memory device picked up for learning lines in stage school - and she turns to look towards the Ranger and his cache of information. "I can read it." She offers helpfully, putting the bag of hair - ew - into her bag as she turns, and sneaky-steps over in Jack's direction. Not that she's trying to glimpse any lock picking technique or anything. "Okay, okay-- hey, key words are dreams, anything about her dad, being watched or--- fuck, I don't know? You're the-- move over, let me read too. You take that page, I'll take the other, and-- ohmygawd, look at her handwriting-- fine, okay, just a quick glimpse, we have thirty seconds, then let's find the office and take a peek and then go." ...Frank's so... Bossy. But does she even /know/ what she should be looking for? She ain't no cop. Just some girl reading another girl's diary. Not long before she starts to frown. Jack sighs a suffering sigh but takes the diplomatic route - he holds the diary so they can both read, turning pages. "She was followed," he says - he tends to make things easy in his own mind. And that /is/ the thing he finds most interesting. "Her dad, she - followed. Hannah? Hmm. We should figure out who that is. Or was." "We're taking this with us." And he'll pocket the diary, cause no way he's leaving it. "Don't worry, I won't hog it - you can have it if you want it," he adds, eyes friendly now. He's stopped teasing; reading the diary has him grimly serious. "Let me just quickly check around here?" He starts looking under furniture, behind the painting, looks for hidden compartments in the walk in closet, taking a few minutes to do that.
"..." Franky is quiet for a long time as she reads - nodding occasionally to what Jack says, but really focuses up. The frown remains. "...I think Hannah is dead." Said like 'I think Hannah is Scottish' or 'I think Hannah likes bread'. Totally a normal thing. Like it'd not be weird, for Suzie Whyte to be speaking to a dead woman. Stranger things have happened. Franklyn nods as Jack mentions sharing the diary - because oh, they will - but when the Ranger moves to investigate more of the room, Franky finds herself drawn back to the vanity. The photos are examined again. In the dim, she... Has an expression which is probably too dark to see. After a moment, she carefully reaches out and takes one of the photos -- a father and daughter, smiling on some bright day. It's carefully placed in her bag, then Frank turns to see where Jack's gotten to. "What're we looking for?" Like she wants to HELP.
There are a number of occult tools hidden behind a panel in the closet, but from the dust on them, they likely haven't been touched in years. There is a fair amount of cash stashed under a set of loose floorboards under the bed, along with a runaway bag, basic supplies, survival gear.
So. Frank might like be a poisonous vine or whatever, but she's really also a perfectly ordinary human girl, as well. ...A tissue emerges from her bag, and Frank not-so-subtly starts wiping at her nose and dabbing at her eyes. It must be the DUST. The dust covering the poignant letters lamenting the troubles of a teenage girl's to what Frank may suspect is her ghostly best friend or something. Franky has a lot of feelings. "Suzie was-- is, I think Suzie's a Mediu-- she can..." Franklyn sniffs in, clears her throat, and promptly bags up the letters in another evidence baggie. Where's Jack? Frank's not looking, but she is carefully pocketing her used tissue. No evidence must remain. "...I know a woman, who's... Similar. We can get in touch. I think she's still at the mortuary... What you find, Ranger?" Tight voice, like she was trying to hide her emos. "Think it's worth looking to see if her dad had an office?"
"A medium. Psychic, like her dad. I guess we should try to... either talk to her dad, or this Hannah." He noticeably shudders. No fan of ghosts, this guy. "Let's check his office, yeah." He heads to the door, to move further into the house.
As if. Instead Franky turns and gives Jack a /startled/ look, as the Ranger puts his hand on her shoulder. "I'm fine. You wouldn't get it. Gawd. Don't they give you sensitivity training -- or is that only for good dogs and mountain goats?" Squint to end those defensive words, then a slow move away from him -- Frank's heading towards the door, creeping along, trying to be vigilant even though, well, this might be her first official B&E. "...You go first."
Cracking the door open carefully, he quietly moves out to make his way to that office, assuming Franklyn knows the way and can lead him there - else he'll check each room.
The upstairs has a bathroom, a closet, and the master bedroom, with a pull-cord in the hallway for the attic's folding stairs. The downstairs has a kitchen and a living room/family room with a TV and an old piano in it, and, yes a den/office. Most of it is dusty, untouched for months, but the desk has seen active use, bills stacked, papers dealt with.
Alas indeed; just Frank's luck: no easy answers for how to get connected with Hannah. Bummer. Like a real bummer. Franklyn follows after Jack - heading through the house on sneaky rubber-soled feet, being careful not to stumble down any stares... But by the time they get into the office and start their nosey around, where is Frank really? Sure, she's inspecting the dusty edges of the bookshelves, vaguely glancing at photos, possibly checking for secret panels behind furniture and... Maybe she's just staring out into space a little bit. Not like Ranger Fry over there, eh? Here he is, with his misty eyed companion stopping the search to get some dust out of her eye.
Seriously, did she zone out? "Yes." Frank encourages -- but she does not move towards the root cellar, just... Sort of gestures towards it. "You see what's up, then -- I'm going to... Find... A bowl." A bowl? Apparently so. Off Franklyn goes -- trying to find a bowl in the kitchen; dark wood or steel, if she can manage, but even a dark baking tray will do in a pinch. Anything which she can fill with water, place back on the floor in the den/office, and... ...Jack's busy with a spider, right? Right; maybe Frank has an iota of privacy... She's kneeling in front of the scrying water - dropping a single strand of Suzie Whyte's hair into the liquid, before she takes a charcoal pencil and sheet of paper from her bag, and starts muttering under her breath, chanting really - Latin, no doubt lines memorised rather than improvised. "Ostende mihi, ostende mihi, ostende mihi..."
Down in the basement - oh boy why did he ever agree to this - Jack navigates to a corner where he spots a larger spider, figuring the bigger the better. He takes a deep breath, crouches down and sits as still as he can with his head bowed. There's a strange twitch to his head, as his senses are assaulted by a strange buzzing, like his brain is being webbed over. This is why he doesn't talk much to spiders. He tries to convey what he wants to know - sending a picture of the basement, of all the spiders - why so many? What do they eat?
...But Franky didn't go down there, no. She went to go sit with her weird magic shit. Speaking of shit... Oh shit. Oh shit. Oh--- well, what was Franklyn even expecting, really? If not a scenario like this? She may have already gone on a few paranoid rambling about said situation to people in Cat-22 before -- oh, how /painfully/ satisfying it must be, for a paranoid to be shown she's right to've gone off on one, right? Mm, feels like trauma. The chanting, "...Ostende mihi, ostende mihi..." It hasn't stopped - Frank's hand draws circles and circles and more circles on the paper; her gloved hand may smudge the charcoal now and them, but they still look like - what? Eyes, portals, wormholes, connections, wholeness, whatever. Such is the life of a magic user. In her weird vision, Franky tries to shift her perspective: trying to look down at Suzie's body, her arms -- then the room, the space, the area; looking to see what condition Suzie may be in, while trying desperately to pick up on /any/ identifying information. A shadow, a label, a bit of trash in the corner: /anything/. But there's nothing. Just skeletons to examine -- right?
Also known as Jack pissed off a bunch of ants, and now has a swarm of perfectly mundane, albeit large, black insects crawling out of the place he stabbed.
As for Franklyn... Suzie has ligature marks on her wrists, chafed skin, bloody bruises and contusions one would expect of someone fighting to escape bondage. Her arms aren't bound now, however -- but her waist is, to the wheeled chair someone is moving her with. The room, as one would expect, is immaculate. Beyond the grotesquerie of fresh and less fresh human remains, everything is clean, sharp, crisp and brightly lit by panels in the ceiling. The drop ceiling itself is sound-deadening white industrial tile and metal strips, banal and ordinary. The floor, too, is tiled in ordinary white, absolutely nothing remarkable or overly memorable about it, beyond how obsessively white it truly is. Even the grout is perfect. Someone spends a lot on cleaning products. Or uses magic. Suzie is clean as well; injured, bound, captive, but clean. There are no tags on the uniforms, and Suzie's clothing appears to be nothing more than hospital paper, too weak to hold a cutting edge or make long enough rope with which to hang oneself.
"Frankie?" he hiss-whispers in the dark house. He'll find her - it's not that big of a house. "We should get going," he whispers, before really taking in the whole scene, feeling edgy now.
Franklyn crying, tears rolling down her cheeks and dripping into the scrying bowl -- sending ripples out, reflecting up black nothingness. Well, black nothingness to him. Who knows what Frank's seen. The paper in front of her doesn't just have eyes or holes or circles written on it. There's a bunch of scribbles there too. When Jack speaks again, saying they should get going? Frank jerks - taken out of her trance, which leaves her looking startled - haunted - like awoken from some terrible dream. Nightmare. Vision. The bowl? Nearly gets kicked over as she stands -- then it's all Franky putting on gloves and taking her automatic writing supplies and making sure the hair is back in her bag and trying to hastily take the bowl back to the kitchen; water to be drained away, object placed back where she found it. Muttering the whole way: "You're right, you're right -- we need to go, we've got to -- they've got her, you know, but I don't know-- fuck, fuck, what's in the baseme-- we need to go, yes, c'mon you're right -- back out, the door or the-- no the window where we..." Chatter-nonsense. She might need to be led back through the house. Franklyn will chill out and explain things, once she's had a cigarette -- and gotten far, far away from here.
However, rather than say something, since he's really bad at saying the right things, he'll simply help her. Clean up. Gather things. Make sure they leave the house as they entered. Quiet, supportive, solid and calm. In the car, he'll listen with a set jaw and offer at the end of listening: "We'll get her out and we'll blow that fucking place up." |