An Only Moderately Creepy 3-Story Home in Suburban Columbus
How atypical are we talking? Alistair had asked.
"Well," Alex replied. "Let's put it this way. Even my family has a shoot-on-sight order for Cuckoos. And these two have been family members for years, without any large-scale destruction, bankruptcy or anyone killing anyone else. My cousin's even saved lives. And my grandmother makes the best tuna-noodle casserole I've ever had."
He got out of the car to open Alistair's door (yes, he'd engaged the child safety lock) to guide his... guest? Could you call him a guest when he was blindfolded? He really didn't want to think of another sentient being has his prisoner. He'd been in that kind of situation himself a few too many times.
He guided Alistair inside, making sure he didn't trip on any steps or wrinkles in the front-hall rug before calling out "Grandma? Grandpa? Sara? I kinda found... uh. Someone we should probably all talk to."
How atypical are we talking? Alistair had asked.
"Well," Alex replied. "Let's put it this way. Even my family has a shoot-on-sight order for Cuckoos. And these two have been family members for years, without any large-scale destruction, bankruptcy or anyone killing anyone else. My cousin's even saved lives. And my grandmother makes the best tuna-noodle casserole I've ever had."
He got out of the car to open Alistair's door (yes, he'd engaged the child safety lock) to guide his... guest? Could you call him a guest when he was blindfolded? He really didn't want to think of another sentient being has his prisoner. He'd been in that kind of situation himself a few too many times.
He guided Alistair inside, making sure he didn't trip on any steps or wrinkles in the front-hall rug before calling out "Grandma? Grandpa? Sara? I kinda found... uh. Someone we should probably all talk to."
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Date: 2016-07-20 06:58 am (UTC)From:That was taken care of when what he assumed was the second of the identified grandmas spoke. Talk of mind reading was unnerving enough to make embarrassment take a backseat and his nerves weren't helped by a third voice joining the conversation. A third voice that belonged to a mad person. Or some kind of monster he'd never heard of that sounded like a mad person. Not reassuring either way.
And not getting better with talk of killing him, as not-unexpected and definitely not funny as that was.
"Right. Ha."
He could still try running. But that option hadn't gotten any more appealing now that he was distinctly outnumbered, even if he was beginning to wonder if the reason he was still alive was that Alex hadn't wanted the hassle of dragging a corpse home. Maybe one of his other family members was a ghoul and it was easier to get groceries if they carried themselves inside.
No. Thinking like that would get him nowhere. He'd chosen to come when he could have fought back in the marsh. He had to have at least a little hope that he wasn't just being toyed with before they sent him back to the Covenant in pieces.
Drawing himself up straight Alistair squared his shoulders and addressed the approximate space where to two older women were. "I don't want to cause any trouble for either of you or your family. I swear that the Covenant will never hear about any of you from me, no matter what happens." He paused and then, unable to quite help himself, "If I'm still alive tomorrow. Which I'd really like to be."