Mary Grace's stomach lurches at the height and the way this whole damn stack was swaying. She'll fuck with evil bees all the damn day, but she'll throw baby Wyatt to the wolves if something tries to knock her over that balcony.
She steps up next to Felicity, bends down in Wy Little Guy's face, and blows a cloud of vape smoke in it.
Presley does not like heights. It's not something he'll admit to—who ever heard of a Quidditch cheerleader who's afraid of heights?—but his face is looking a little pale as he pulls away from the railing and braces one hand against the wall of the trailer.
"Not a lot of room for us to maneuver here," he mutters. He tightens his grip on his burner wand. "And really, you don't think it's the incredibly obvious tarot deck?"
"Wyatt's got layers," Uriah objects, tip toeing along like this is nothing to him. Nothing feels real anymore, so, sure, whatever. Here they are. Maybe this is just some extended death hallucination. "It's probably somethin' less obvious than a ball or some cards."
Uriah's comment makes Felicity take in the rest of the scene once more. Look for something less obvious. That stinky green smoke that's wafting up? Could it be? A vape was the answer earlier tonight...
She leans over the railing, arguably too unafraid of heights, and tries to get a better look at it. The movement causes her to wince and let out an audible. "Ugh." She's still sore from her encounter with bugs back at school.
Precariously perched, she closes her eyes and breaths the smoke in deeply through her nose.
Patrice squints at Felicity, debating on grabbing her clothing to keep her stable or grabbing the tarot deck instead. She's probably fine. He wiggles past whoever he needs to so that he can try to pluck the deck from Wyatt's mother's hands.
"Don't fall, Felicity. I guess we should just start picking things up?"
"Careful, some stuff might be other stuff," Mary Grace warns in the same tone as a distracted babysitter warning the kid not to touch the stove. She wrinkles her nose at Patrice as he squeezes past her, then goes back to checking her makeup in her compact mirror. "If anything starts ringing, just deck the bitch."
"I hate all of you," Presley declares, because it's been almost twenty-hour hours since the last time he said it, and familiarity brings comfort. He inches over to Felicity (every self-preservation instinct in his brain screaming) and sets his loaded tote bag down on the ground. Presley forces himself to stand right by the railing, and readies to grab Felicity in case something disastrous happens.
When Patrice touches the deck, the memory begins to play again. "Okay, Mama!" Wyatt agrees eagerly. He has some sort of food smudged at the corner of his mouth, an artificial orange that suggests that it might be cheese whiz, but neither he nor his mother seem bothered as they settle in to flimsy plastic lawn furniture against the porch railing farthest from that acrid smoke that seems to creep into the lungs and buzz pleasantly.
Cassandra takes out the deck and begins to shuffle it, the motion repeated and thoughtless as an old habit. "Why don't you do the honors?" she asks, still unconsciously shuffling over and over, before passing the stack to him. "Three card spread. Past, present, future." She looks up briefly, smiling faintly. Maybe it's just because the porch is so small, but she seems to be straight at the group of teenagers standing here in Wyatt's memory. "Your past, present, and future."
Wyatt takes the cards and begins to shuffle them awkwardly. His hands are already getting big, but he holds the deck awkwardly, trying to hide the scrapes and bruises on the back of his knuckles from his mother, and he doesn't have her years of practice. More than once, he nearly fumbles the deck, but manages to keep a hold on it. One by one, he lays out three cards on the top of an overturned plastic milk crate without flourish or any thought to presentation. They're blurry and difficult to distinguish, like you could see them if you squinted very hard or just put on your glasses. The bold colors and the clean lines of the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck could be recognized by anyone familiar, but the individual cards are still impossible to name.
"Okay, so. This one's…" Wyatt says, pointing to the first card representing the past. "It's like… success. Confidence. Winning. And this suit means fire. Oh, but it's upside down, so it's like the opposite."
Cassandra doesn't comment, only watches Wyatt as he moves on to the next card. He leans in, searching the card's illustration for clues. "This suit's water, like tears, so it's for feelings. So it's… Sad?"
Wyatt scrunches his nose at the last card and pointedly refuses to look at his mother, thinking through his options. "This, uhh…" He scratches the back of his neck. "It's an end."
"And how do you put that all together?" she prods. "You look at everything you have first, whether that's bones or tea leaves or clouds or any other tools, but then you have to look at the big picture."
"I lost at something, so I'm going to be sad about it, and uh…"
The memory suddenly freezes on Wyatt's uncertainty. A breeze begins to blow, but it only impacts those visiting the memory, picking at their hair and skirts impishly. It almost feels like the breeze is trying to pick their pockets or do some other mischief, until it starts to pick up anyway. It gets faster and stronger, whipping into an angry frenzy, though it still has no effect on Wyatt and Cassandra Webberley. It wails and thrashes and threatens to blow the Wildgulch Juniors over the porch railing. Then it grabs the cards from Wyatt and flings them everywhere. Just like that, the wind is gone, though it leaves a mess in its wake, tarot cards on the ground, stuck to the walls, tucked in Wyatt's hair and on Cassandra's shoulder, laying on the banister, and even a few in a spiderweb overhead. Did any get blown over the railing? It's hard to say. Wyatt, meanwhile, is still frozen holding a deck that isn't there with the other hand hovering over an empty makeshift table.
"'Stuff might be other stuff?' And love you, Pres."
As the memory starts up again Patrice pivots awkwardly to get out of Cassandra's way, because death by falling because someone's memory mom knocked you over is a pretty embarrassing way to go. Once the dream residents settle in, though, he's immediately close again, peering over the woman's shoulder, watching as the spread is laid out. He does squint, trying to make out the cards with no luck.
"You'd think he'd be able to remember the c- shit." The seemingly harmless breeze has picked up, and a real wind is bad. One hand grabs onto Cassandra's arm as an anchor and his other reaches out to grab whoever is nearest to him.
"Yeah, saw it in the mushroom girl's head, and—" The swaying of the trailers in the whipping wind swallows the words in her throat, and Mary Grace jumps backward, throwing herself behind Patrice instead of taking his hand. Oh, were they doing a baby chain? Because Mary Grace is pretty sure you were just trying to protect her.
"Gonna fuckin' kill this kid," she mutters through gritted teeth.
"Fuck!" The swirling wind has only started to kick up when Presley wraps an arm around Felicity's waist, and grabs the railing with other hand. This is far from the most stable position (why isn't there a wall here), but Presley refuses to die like this, and he is not seeing Felicity tumble to her death either.
The gusting wind feels interminable. Presley's eyes squeeze shut, but he feels the unexpected spray of tarot cards, and just as suddenly as it started, the wind dies down. Presley peeks around them. No one died? Unfortunate. "I have a new suggestion. What if we just leave Webberley here?"
Edited (no one in this group is helpful) 2020-06-04 19:33 (UTC)
"I wasn't going to fall." It's Felicity's way of saying thanks, and also an outright lie. Presley 100% saved her life. "And don't be ridiculous. We're not leaving Wyatt." He wouldn't leave one of them behind.
Of course, she has no idea how to save him. She'll leave that to the others. It's called delegating. "Maybe someone can figure out which cards he was... looking at..."
She trails off because she just noticed what Presley's holding. Her tote bag.
"Well that's gonna be a bitch, 'cause I wasn't paying that close attention," Mary Grace says, picking a card out of Wyatt's hair. It's... a guy? It's a guy. "We could just start fuckin' laying three cards down at a time."
Mary Grace hiding behind him is better than her falling to her death but is definitely a little annoying. Patrice takes stock of the others, reassuring himself that they're all there, before he starts to think. He's got a decent amount tarot experience unlike the rest of his roommates, so maybe this won't be too hard? If they don't get blown to hell again.
"Do you not know how to grab a hand, Mary Grace? Anyway, first one is a wands card, second one is a cups, and the third is probably Death," he says, glancing around, reaching for one of the cards on Cassandra.
"I'm going to have to think about what specific cards the first two are, but it's going to be a little hard if they're all still blurry."
The card on Cassandra's shoulder is the five of cups, as clear as day. In fact, looking at the cards that are face up, they all seem perfectly clear and visible now.
Presley collects the cards stuck to the railing, dropping them into his Pouch-gifted tote as he goes.
"If the answer fell off the building, I'm going to kill Webberley." He turns to see what Felicity is talking about. "Did you... pick that up in someone's memory?"
"Wyatt gave it to me for prom," she replies like it's the most obvious thing in the world. Didn't anyone pay attention to the fact that they went together? Do they not know she won Prom Princess? She blinks it all away and goes on.
"So I guess it's technically not from his memory..." which means it's not the linchpin. Her shoulder hunch slightly. "...but still kinda cool, huh? I think it means we're on the right path." She nods. Definitely.
"Ohhhh, did my guy Wy spring for the premium package?" Mary Grace asks. "Did someone's mama raise him up right?" She elbows the stuck Cassandra, like the compliment will travel back in time, and plucks another card off her. "I've got a... Magician? Oh, and here's a bunch of cups, like eight or nine of 'em."
"This is the present card!" Patrice says, confident, almost excited, as he looks at the card he's taken from Cassandra. Maybe it isn't such a hassle to be the only one that has the information necessary to solve this. He leans to set it on the table, but, after a moment, thinks better of it and keeps it in his hand, in case the wind blows again.
After he settles back on his heels he looks up, eyeing Felicity's corsage. It's weird, but not exactly informative.
"....the past one is the six of wands. And did he make that?"
Patrice probably has the right idea, because a light breeze blows past, making the cards on the floor skitter slightly. The one in the spiderweb wobbles precariously.
Checking the cards he's collected so far, they appear to be mostly swords and pentacles. Useless. Presley drops his cards on the milk crate, and walks past the immobile boy and his mother to check the cards that were blown to the wall. "And the future card..." He reaches up and tugs down the one caught in the spiderweb, spinning on his heel to flash it at his friends. "Death."
"I got the six!" Felicity announces and flicks the card in Patrice's direction. But she's a witch, not a magician, and the card nosedives to the porch. She picks it up and walks it over to him.
Edited (just wanted to get this in before work starts) 2020-06-05 17:19 (UTC)
Should have held on to that card a little better, Felicity. Just as she's about to pass it to Patrice, she loses it, snatched away on a breeze and carried across the porch to that green smoke. It flickers, sort of appearing to move and sort of not, like a holographic image, but that doesn't stop it from carrying the six of wands up, up and out of sight.
At first, it seems like it might just be gone, trapping the group here forever, but a keen eye will spot it on the floor above little Wyatt's home, stuck in the grille of that window AC unit.
MEMORY: Practice
She steps up next to Felicity, bends down in Wy Little Guy's face, and blows a cloud of vape smoke in it.
"It's gonna be a sport ball, callin' it."
MEMORY: Practice
"Not a lot of room for us to maneuver here," he mutters. He tightens his grip on his burner wand. "And really, you don't think it's the incredibly obvious tarot deck?"
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
She leans over the railing, arguably too unafraid of heights, and tries to get a better look at it. The movement causes her to wince and let out an audible. "Ugh." She's still sore from her encounter with bugs back at school.
Precariously perched, she closes her eyes and breaths the smoke in deeply through her nose.
MEMORY: Practice
"Don't fall, Felicity. I guess we should just start picking things up?"
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
Cassandra takes out the deck and begins to shuffle it, the motion repeated and thoughtless as an old habit. "Why don't you do the honors?" she asks, still unconsciously shuffling over and over, before passing the stack to him. "Three card spread. Past, present, future." She looks up briefly, smiling faintly. Maybe it's just because the porch is so small, but she seems to be straight at the group of teenagers standing here in Wyatt's memory. "Your past, present, and future."
Wyatt takes the cards and begins to shuffle them awkwardly. His hands are already getting big, but he holds the deck awkwardly, trying to hide the scrapes and bruises on the back of his knuckles from his mother, and he doesn't have her years of practice. More than once, he nearly fumbles the deck, but manages to keep a hold on it. One by one, he lays out three cards on the top of an overturned plastic milk crate without flourish or any thought to presentation. They're blurry and difficult to distinguish, like you could see them if you squinted very hard or just put on your glasses. The bold colors and the clean lines of the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck could be recognized by anyone familiar, but the individual cards are still impossible to name.
"Okay, so. This one's…" Wyatt says, pointing to the first card representing the past. "It's like… success. Confidence. Winning. And this suit means fire. Oh, but it's upside down, so it's like the opposite."
Cassandra doesn't comment, only watches Wyatt as he moves on to the next card. He leans in, searching the card's illustration for clues. "This suit's water, like tears, so it's for feelings. So it's… Sad?"
Wyatt scrunches his nose at the last card and pointedly refuses to look at his mother, thinking through his options. "This, uhh…" He scratches the back of his neck. "It's an end."
"And how do you put that all together?" she prods. "You look at everything you have first, whether that's bones or tea leaves or clouds or any other tools, but then you have to look at the big picture."
"I lost at something, so I'm going to be sad about it, and uh…"
The memory suddenly freezes on Wyatt's uncertainty. A breeze begins to blow, but it only impacts those visiting the memory, picking at their hair and skirts impishly. It almost feels like the breeze is trying to pick their pockets or do some other mischief, until it starts to pick up anyway. It gets faster and stronger, whipping into an angry frenzy, though it still has no effect on Wyatt and Cassandra Webberley. It wails and thrashes and threatens to blow the Wildgulch Juniors over the porch railing. Then it grabs the cards from Wyatt and flings them everywhere. Just like that, the wind is gone, though it leaves a mess in its wake, tarot cards on the ground, stuck to the walls, tucked in Wyatt's hair and on Cassandra's shoulder, laying on the banister, and even a few in a spiderweb overhead. Did any get blown over the railing? It's hard to say. Wyatt, meanwhile, is still frozen holding a deck that isn't there with the other hand hovering over an empty makeshift table.
MEMORY: Practice
As the memory starts up again Patrice pivots awkwardly to get out of Cassandra's way, because death by falling because someone's memory mom knocked you over is a pretty embarrassing way to go. Once the dream residents settle in, though, he's immediately close again, peering over the woman's shoulder, watching as the spread is laid out. He does squint, trying to make out the cards with no luck.
"You'd think he'd be able to remember the c- shit." The seemingly harmless breeze has picked up, and a real wind is bad. One hand grabs onto Cassandra's arm as an anchor and his other reaches out to grab whoever is nearest to him.
MEMORY: Practice
"Gonna fuckin' kill this kid," she mutters through gritted teeth.
MEMORY: Practice
The gusting wind feels interminable. Presley's eyes squeeze shut, but he feels the unexpected spray of tarot cards, and just as suddenly as it started, the wind dies down. Presley peeks around them. No one died? Unfortunate. "I have a new suggestion. What if we just leave Webberley here?"
MEMORY: Practice
Of course, she has no idea how to save him. She'll leave that to the others. It's called delegating. "Maybe someone can figure out which cards he was... looking at..."
She trails off because she just noticed what Presley's holding. Her tote bag.
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
"Do you not know how to grab a hand, Mary Grace? Anyway, first one is a wands card, second one is a cups, and the third is probably Death," he says, glancing around, reaching for one of the cards on Cassandra.
"I'm going to have to think about what specific cards the first two are, but it's going to be a little hard if they're all still blurry."
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
The tote slung over Presley's shoulder is momentarily forgotten.
MEMORY: Practice
"If the answer fell off the building, I'm going to kill Webberley." He turns to see what Felicity is talking about. "Did you... pick that up in someone's memory?"
MEMORY: Practice
"So I guess it's technically not from his memory..." which means it's not the linchpin. Her shoulder hunch slightly. "...but still kinda cool, huh? I think it means we're on the right path." She nods. Definitely.
There's no evidence to support this claim.
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
After he settles back on his heels he looks up, eyeing Felicity's corsage. It's weird, but not exactly informative.
"....the past one is the six of wands. And did he make that?"
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
At first, it seems like it might just be gone, trapping the group here forever, but a keen eye will spot it on the floor above little Wyatt's home, stuck in the grille of that window AC unit.
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice
MEMORY: Practice