Dirty laundry

the LAUNDROMAT
Perhaps you live in a dorm or an apartment that hasn't seen renovations since the eighties. Maybe your luck has really dried up and your washing machine at home broke the night before a job interview and you haven't done a load of laundry in two weeks. Whatever your story is you've ended up at the local 24-hour laundromat. It could be creeping in on midnight or three in the morning. Either way, the place is a dead zone. Leaving you floating in a liminal space where reality has been stripped down to the sounds of clattering quarters and the continuous thrum of the machines under the buzz of neon lights. This would be a horrible time to bump into someone you know, or worse - a complete stranger while you're staring into the middle distance in nothing but your American flag boxers reading a paperback.
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But even with what Frankie had already admitted, Joe wasn't about to say anything about being part of a small mercenary team, even if that's really what it was.
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"You know, retired military doesn't really surprise me. You've got the... what do you call it. The bearing." He crossed one leg over the other and considered Joe for a moment. He wouldn't have been surprised to find out Joe wasn't telling him the whole truth--there was something off about him that Frankie couldn't quite put his finger on. It was a feeling, like an itch in his brain he couldn't quite scratch. But it wasn't any of his business, and probably the less he knew the better.
"Have you lived around here long?"
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A small smile, "And if you think I've got the bearing, you should see my husband, sister and I working on a task together, even if it's just setting the table for dinner. We're a unit now, unto ourselves."
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Most of the time, he was able to keep from thinking about it too hard. But right then, he felt the loneliness like an ache, like a hole in his chest.
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"This is... it's probably another question I shouldn't be asking, and if it's something you can't answer, that's fine, you just have to tell me." He considered, expression serious as he continued, "Are you the only one that your," the briefest hesitation before settling on, "handlers have control of?"
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"What a very interesting question for someone with only a passing curiosity in a stranger's life to have." He sat up, putting his feet back on the floor. "And it creates a problem for me. Because, you see," he stood up and walked around to the other side of the table from Joe, so that when he leaned on it, he could still be looking at Joe head on, "I don't give single solitary fuck about them and what they may or may not want me to tell anyone. Honestly? I'd be happy to tell you anything you want to know, provided I haven't been previously ordered not to divulge it. However, all they have to do is ask me the right question and I'm telling them all about you and everything I told you in turn. Now, I'm too valuable to them for them to punish too badly, so whatever happens to me, I know I can handle it. But you'd have their attention. And that's not a good thing to have. So, before I answer your question, you need to answer mine."
He stood up again, back straight, hands on the table, gaze deadly serious and unblinking. "How badly do you want to know? Are you prepared to risk the consequences getting answers from me could bring?"
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The rest of what Frankie had to say, however, had Joe going still in turn, one brow lifting a little, setting down the shirt he'd been in the process of folding. It was a warning, and a concern, that clearly bore some weight, and he wasn't going to just disregard that.
He was, however, prevented from answering right away by his phone buzzing in the laundry basket, and he glanced down at it, "Ah, and that's the husband. Always seems to know when I'm about to get myself neck deep in something. Hang on." The text exchange was a quick one and Joe set the phone down again, nodding once, "Yes, the information is worth the risk."
Even if this wasn't the group they were looking for, it was definitely the kind of thing they should be looking into, and since they were in the area, there was no reason not to try and get two birds with one stone.
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"I don't know about anyone else magically bound by..." his mouth worked a bit when his statement couldn't naturally avoid the name of the group who owned him. He'd been forbidden from saying it, and from divulging particular aspects of the group, but he sure as hell would talk as much as he could when he could. "By them. That doesn't mean they don't exist, but I have never been told about any, and I've never interacted with any. I am, however, extremely certain that I'm the only one of my kind."
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He made a quiet sound in the back of his throat, clearly thinking something over, but what he asked was: "Will I regret asking how you know that for certain?"
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He was still reasonably sure that even with as big as the world was, they would have run across each other, and he was reasonably sure they never had run into the same people after more than a regular lifetime.
But instead of letting that show on his face, he just nodded, "I see. I imagine it makes things easier, knowing you're the only one of your kind." His brow creased a little, "I'd imagine it's lonely, too."
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He nodded at the actual answer, however, "Part of why talking to me could be dangerous. I see." He tilted his head, almost a shrug as he resumed folding the shirt he'd set aside, "I'm hardly going to be the one to tell you not to, though."
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He tilted his head, considering Joe for a moment. "I have serious doubts about how honest you're being with me--I'm not mad about that, it's smart. I don't want to know anything more about your life, in case they do send me after you. But I am starting to wonder if maybe you'd be a little more capable of holding me off than the other poor SOBs they tell me to kill."
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A small smile, "But let's hope neither of us has to find out the outcome of that altercation, hm?"
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Granted, it had been a very long time since Nicky had said anything of the sort without affection being the underlying tone, but that wasn't something that he needed to relay just at the moment.
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He sighed deeply, then got comfortable in the chair, looking over at Joe. "Any other questions?"
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A little shake of his head followed, "And if that isn't something you know, that's fine, too." He suspected that kind of thing might be above Frankie's pay grade, or at least one of those things they kept from him to keep him under control.
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"A little of both. The actual base of operations is... elsewhere, but it can be connected to different places through... let's call them magical shortcuts. It's more complicated than that but it's nothing that you'd need to know. The shortcuts do take a certain amount of power to maintain, so they can only keep a small number open at any one time--the shortcut they've had to this area had been open for a while. There's a lot around here they want to keep tabs on, I suppose."
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He wasn't sure if that made it more likely or less likely that this was, in fact, the same group they were there for. It was something that he'd have to go over the information they had once he got back home, keeping what he'd learned in mind to see if it fit.
"It's a high-traffic area, in more ways than one, I could imagine that's the kind of thing they'd want to keep abreast of, certainly the kind of thing I'd want to remain aware of if I was running some kind of criminal empire."
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That was about as much as Frankie could probably say about the coven, and he didn't particularly feel like testing his limits just then.
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He inclined his head, almost a shrug and almost an apology, "Of course, I can't promise I'll be able to answer fully, but that's the nature of the job isn't it?"
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His dryer went off, and he went over to check his clothes. They were dry and stain free, so he pulled them out and folded them, which took only a couple of minutes. Before he picked everything up to leave, he turned to Joe with a sad smile. "It was nice talking to you. Thanks for keeping me company."