http://teh-rest.livejournal.com/ (
teh-rest.livejournal.com) wrote in
randomplaces2006-08-30 12:38 am
Entry tags:
Sam's Earth: Detroit
Leeroy had learned his lesson.
Never, ever swap the memory cards on Jeimu's PlayStation 2. And don't hide the one that had all her DDR save games on it.
She'd sworn up a storm and then opened up a portal in the living room and kicked him through it. Now he was here, in a strange bar in a strange city. He didn't feel too concerned, Mu would bring him back when she decided he deserved to set foot on Newfoundland again.
But while he was here there was only one thing to do.
"What d'ye got fer beers, b'y?" he asked the bartender.
Never, ever swap the memory cards on Jeimu's PlayStation 2. And don't hide the one that had all her DDR save games on it.
She'd sworn up a storm and then opened up a portal in the living room and kicked him through it. Now he was here, in a strange bar in a strange city. He didn't feel too concerned, Mu would bring him back when she decided he deserved to set foot on Newfoundland again.
But while he was here there was only one thing to do.
"What d'ye got fer beers, b'y?" he asked the bartender.

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What the fierfek was that? he wondered, rounding the corner and coming upon a very strange spectacle indeed.
A girl, wielding a shotgun, shooting at the mist. Except it wasn't exactly mist. Leeroy honestly couldn't see what she was shooting at, but it was there. He didn't know how he could tell, but he could. She screamed at her invisible assailants and reloaded her gun faster than anyone he'd ever seen before.
He crouched back against the wall, wondering if he should intervene when he was both unarmed and unable to see the things that were attacking.
Before he could come to a decision, the girl moved, and he saw another girl, this one a blond, cowering further back down the alley, who sat rigid with fear for a moment before falling unconscious.
He felt powerless to do anything. He wasn't even sure if he should speak. But judging by how the blond girl was slumped as though in mid-air, she was being held in such a way that if whatever it was was human, the gun girl should have a clear shot if she moved...
"T' yer left! He's open t' yer left!" He stood up and pointed. "Shoot 'im there!"
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It hit the hunter right between the eyes, and the thing howled and dropped the blond, getting her out of the way.
"Thanks, God." Sam blew it away, then stepped back and scanned the alley. Hunters ran in threes, but she'd been trained to never, EVER take Them for granted. She was aware of the man still watching, and of the blond whimpering and pulling herself up a wall, but didn't pay attention till she was sure there were no more threats.
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"What was that all about?" he asked.
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He froze, with both hands over his eyes.
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Sinking to his knees, he only just became aware of the pain in his shoulder.
"Ow," he muttered to himself.
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