acrookedchild: (He bought a crooked cat)
Abigail Widdowson ([personal profile] acrookedchild) wrote in [community profile] undergrounds2015-06-01 08:03 pm

Fires at Midnight

June 1st, night:

Abigail had never seen the Reds and Night Council in action before. She'd stayed tucked away in Geap Manor, learning about the Night Council and Institute and all those things she'd face in the real world, but she'd only heard of them. They existed only as an abstract concept. Being in Barnet was an entirely different situation.

On the surface, it seemed peaceful. Emissaries came from the Institute to the factions -- the vampies and the covens being the central focus, but there were others who looked for people who were different. The meta-humans. From what she could tell, they were simply being convinced to join the Institute.

But there were darker things at work, too.

Her attention was primarily on the covens. Most of them seemed to welcome the influence of Redbright, as it meant they were closer to the heart of Circle Daybreak. For a light witch, that was everything. But she saw what some of the others tried to hide because she was looking for it. One skittish girl had particularly caught her attention, so Abigail followed her, meaning to pull her aside when it was safe.

Someone else had been waiting to get her alone, too, though.

From where she'd stood, Abigail watched as the man -- a large one, all brawn but very quiet too -- grabbed the girl. None of her magic could protect either her or the victim, so Abigail had ducked down, hiding behind the large bin. She'd tried not to even breathe as she listened. The girl screamed, and the man threatened her. If she didn't give him the names of her fellow dark witches, he'd kill her.

Over and over, she'd said there weren't any others. She didn't know who they were. She didn't know where they were. He hadn't been satisfied. So, he stabbed her twice. As the girl slumped down against the brick wall, the man took her purse and ran. Anyone who found her would see a mugging gone bad.

She waited for some time, trying to make herself stop shaking, before she pulled herself to her feet and staggered away from the bin and scene, almost completely without thinking that the noise and smell of blood might easily have drawn others who weren't part of the engagement.


June 3rd, day:

Abigail kept to herself on the second. She'd always been taught to mind the phases of the moon, so she'd stayed in Geap Manor all that night, safely tucked away from anything that might want to hurt her. After that, though, she went back to Barnet.

The girl's face hadn't ever left her. She could still hear her screaming.

But it told Abigail what she had to do. There was still the official order that every dark witch who wouldn't renounce the magic she practiced had to leave Barnet. Those were the ones Abigail was trying to help now.

The cards she distributed (passed off to people she could recognize as witches who didn't seem to be violently opposed to dark witches) were simple:

Need to leave Barnet? Have nowhere to go?

Help is available.

020 7946 0660

Call or text. Any time day or night.


Dangerous? Possibly. But that was why she had a cheap burner phone for the calls and texts.

She had no solid plan as she went around the borough that day, handing a card or two where it seemed appropriate and leaving them tucked inside the right books in the right stores, places she knew they'd be found by the people who needed them.

June 6th, night:

The job was nearly done, and Abigail knew it. She had done almost everything she could, and she felt she'd helped at least some people. Others were dead, yes, and there were a few fools who thought they could continue to pass as Daybreak under the close scrutiny of the Redbright Institute and their people. Them, Abigail couldn't help, and she was afraid of them. After all, they knew her name, knew about her activity here. But she couldn't let fear stop her.

Still, she waited in a pub she'd been using as a waypoint. She'd made it clear she was leaving Barnet and not coming back at 22:00, period. Any last minute stragglers were welcome to come up until that point, which meant she still had an hour to wait. Just in case.
viduation: (pic#9095440)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-09 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
At the confirmation, his gaze slides sidelong to look at her. It's brief, but knowing. Her tone is all too familiar to him; the way she says the words my family's home is akin to how the memory sounds in his head. Quiet, far away. A weighty silence falls over him like a heavy coat; he too seems distant, at least until she mentions the prospect of a charred ruin, a hollowed out home, blackened walls and scorched foundations and creaking beams that Derek can hear even now, air thick enough to choke --

he breathes, though it's belated, comes only after a telling catch in his throat. But Derek has a long history of keeping a stoney face, and that's the only outward tell. Still, he thinks of Abigail and a burning house and, even if the basement would not be filled with her family, even if she would lose a building and not the people in it, his chest feels tight, his throat dry. Now filled with a restless, uncomfortable energy, the type that makes his skin crawl, he wishes he wasn't driving, wishes he could move.

Getting involved doesn't suit Derek; inaction suits him worse. Fishing his phone out of his pocket, he drives whilst hitting the pass code and sliding through the contacts. It's easy; there aren't many. When he finds his own number, he holds the phone out to her, eyes ahead.

"Consider it off the record," he states, tone hard because the action itself is not - Derek struggles to compensate. But he doesn't necessarily want his pack involved in this: this is him, alone, and what little he might be able to make that count for. "If you want it."
viduation: (pic#9096190)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-09 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Really, Derek should notice her tears immediately - the salt in the air, the sound, soft as it is. Instead, he's so fixated on the road, determined to evade the recesses of memory, that at first the shift in her doesn't click. It's only when she starts typing at her phone that he glances at her again, and then the look he gives her is almost fraught, albeit short-lived - though it's followed with a swift double take, because at first he doesn't believe what he saw. He doesn't want to.

Derek will accept, readily, that he's possibly the worst person to be stuck with right now. His fingers flex like he means to touch her, but he doesn't. He glances at her again, perhaps to verify that she's still crying. She is. And he's still the worst person to deal with it.

"Don't." He almost winces; it sounds sharp even to his own ears. "Apologize. Don't apologize." Oh my god, he's useless. Pursing his lips and scowling at the road, he hopes for the right thing to say to present itself. It doesn't. Derek struggles.

"You're not doing anything wrong, Abigail," he tries, half-under his breath. Were they anywhere else, he'd probably have fallen silent, but their current proximity spurs him to make an attempt.
viduation: (pic#9095448)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-11 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
"Because you're one of them!" It comes out sharply, but Derek is unapologetic. It's better that she fully understands, recognizes what she's getting herself into. Her distress makes him uneasy; he's always worked with anger, he knows how to use that, and her rising panic is foreign even if he knows it all too well.

"You do know why you're doing this, and you need to keep knowing." At least, Derek thinks she does, thinks she will if she stops freaking out and considers it. Is it dangerous? Absolutely.

He sighs again, largely because he doesn't know where to go with this wave of sentiment, of understanding.

"Your mind is made up, right?"
viduation: (pic#9016580)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-12 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
"Alright then," he says, sounding relieved, shoulders sloping out of their hard line. He is relieved at her iron, her determination - partly because she's no longer crying, admittedly, but mainly because she needs it. "Good."

Not that she has to do it, or that she's been driven to it, but that she's resolved, that she's making herself ready. Where some might balk at the idea of a Midnight coven, Derek considers the witches again in terms of werewolves. Those on their own are loose canons. They might be weaker, but they tend to be the ones causing trouble. Pack means safety, security. However dangerous Midnight witches might be, Derek is sure that they'll have better control in a group.

He glances at her again, perhaps to ensure that she's alright.
viduation: (pic#8952851)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-12 03:27 am (UTC)(link)
He shakes his head, but when he huffs it sounds almost amused - it makes him sound more gruff than angry.

"I already told you. Don't apologize." Frequently, almost nervously, his eyes flick to her in swift assessment. He doesn't ask if she's okay, but the looks serve the same purpose.
viduation: (pic#9095852)

[personal profile] viduation 2015-06-12 08:47 pm (UTC)(link)
That reduces him to staring at her dumbly again, because he has no idea what she's thanking him for. As far as Derek sees it, he's been driving her around in circles and offering little in the way of comfort. Still, she seems earnest in the sentiment, and so Derek gives her a nod, accepting.

He fails to think of an articulate or valuable response, however, and so remains quiet. Sorry, Abigail.