Friday, April 25, 2014

Shake Down


Sue kept an eye on the two guys across the street. They looked like typical gang bangers, late thirties, early forties, but she could tell they were weres. Wolves, she thought from the way they moved, and low status ones. Cannon fodder. She kept working. She was in the open garage of an old house that had last had any wiring work done in the twenties, back when they thought one outlet in a room was generous. That's one outlet, not a duplex pair. The service for the whole house was only twenty amps. Just pressing start on a microwave would black out the whole house.
It was one of her favorite jobs. For this, her small size was an asset. She had to wriggle through crawl spaces under the house and through spaces too small to call an attic. She pulled wire through spaces never intended to have it, and occasionally, reluctantly, she had to tell customers that she'd either have to run the wire through surface conduits or start tearing into lath and plaster for a lot of extra money. All the same to her, she'd do the lath and plaster work if it was her house; not that she could afford one of these houses. She could never understand someone that paid more than a million for a house and then went cheap on the wiring. Either way, it was work that satisfied her, and good paying work. Her bills always kept coming.
She was done inside and was pulling wire into the service box in the garage preparatory to mounting the breakers and hooking them up. The house now had modern wiring with plenty of capacity to meet all the demands of a modern life. She'd wired an entertainment room and a computer work office for the techie client and had tried to get him to let her set up a data closet and pull Cat 6 and fiber around the house while she was at it. He said, no, he'd use wireless and handle it himself. She didn't argue, well, not with more than a raised eyebrow, but thought it was a mistake not to set up for the highest bandwidth and transmission speed in the house. Nobody ever regrets too much bandwidth. He really should provide A/C for the computer room too. Relying on the central air to cool a room with that much heat load was going to run the air-conditioning too much in the rest of the house. That was going to cost money. Oh, well, his house. Inspector was coming today, and in this neighborhood that meant Tom Williams. That meant the inspection would consist mostly of shooting the shit while he walked around checking off boxes. He knew her work, knew that it was usually far better than code demanded unless the customer insisted on the cheapest job she'd do, and knew that she'd turn down sub-code work. She'd have to remember to ask if Marie had delivered yet. That was funny, calling it delivering, like she was a bicycle messenger, “Delivery! Here's your baby!” Sue wondered what the tip should be for delivering a baby.
Out of the corner of her eye she saw the two creeps across the way crossing the street toward her. She flipped back the flap in her custom tool belt to expose her thirty-eight, and mentally checked, yep, got silver loads today. Then she checked the pull on her gun and on the accessibility of her sleeve sheaths. Weapons don't do you any good if you can't get to them. The knives in her sleeves were also custom, made to her order, with just enough silver added to the alloy to make them effective against weres, but not so much that it would affect the strength or the edge. The balance was nice too, they were throwable, even though that meant blades a little thicker than she liked for a hand-held. The blades had to be heavier to offset the weight of the handles, even though the handles had been made light. It meant the handles were small for close-in work, and big for a throwing knife, but all in all, she was pleased with their versatility. Satisfied, she went back to her work.
“What are you doing here?” Sue kept on pulling wires to terminals and tightening screws and raised an eyebrow. “Working.” “You need to pay to work in this neighborhood.” Sue laughed and said, “Don't I know it.” The guys looked at each other with puzzled looks and then plowed on. “You've got to pay a toll to work in this neighborhood.” She glanced over at them and kept tightening one wire after another and said, “You have to pay a toll”. “What?” “You said you got to, it's have to.” “You some kind of wise guy? Five hundred bucks, now!” You'd think that they would be slightly concerned about her unconcerned attitude, but being were made them over confident. Oh, well.
She dropped her electric screwdriver toward the toolbox and as their eyes followed it she pulled her gun from her tool belt and slipped her knife from it's sheath. As the handle of the knife dropped into her hand she dropped and swept one guys legs. Immediately she launched up and onto the other guy and bowled him over before he could react. She had the knife to his throat and the gun pointed at the other guy's head. “Silver rounds, silver alloy, boys, you might carefully consider your next move.” Her decisive air did more than the threat of the weapons to freeze them into motionlessness. If she were pack, she'd be far above them in the dominance hierarchy, and both of them instinctively showed their throats.
She rolled off of the were and stood up putting her weapons away as quickly as she'd pulled them. “Did someone send you to harass me, or was this your own lame-brained idea?” They looked at each other and then back at her as if asking permission to speak. “Get up, and answer the question.” “It was our idea, to make some extra money.” She shook her head. “You guys shouldn't try to have your own ideas.” She considered for a minute, and said, “I should contact the pack about this, but this time I'm letting you go. You owe me though.” “Ok.” They still stood looking at her. “Go!” They scurried off turning down the sidewalk in a hurry to get out of her sight. If they were in their wolf form their tails would be tucked tightly between their legs. She shook her head and went back to work.

1 comment:

  1. this character Sue is badass and really intriguing. the writing here is great. dialogue pretty good too. maybe a little unsure of the setting at times, like how close the weres got to Sue while she was working, i was surprised she could use the knife they were so close to her. easy 2 fix. i really like this character shes smart, sassy, tough, real.

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