Chapter 2
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It was, of course, hot pink.
An enormous hot pink pickup truck that looked like it was big enough to haul a yacht.
Prince knew the only reason he'd gotten it was to piss her off, since the man couldn't give less of a shit about aesthetics. She also knew it was working.
"God, I hate you." She grumbled, glaring out the passenger side window and into the mist.
"What was that, Prince?" Rose grinned knowingly.
"You're like cancer," She responded, "If cancer could be a smug bitch."
"That's pretty harsh, Prince." He joked with a smile, "makes a guy wonder if he's truly appreciated."
"If I shoot you in the head, will blood come out, or will it explode in glitter just to spite me?" She snarked.
"I dunno," Rose commented, scratching his chin in false thought, "I suppose we've seen weirder. You, for instance."
Prince groaned, but didn't dispute it.
"Hey, speaking of, where's my gun?" She asked.
"Well, Big Betty's still in Honolulu,"
"Damn,"
"But your peacemaker's in the gun case." He explained, pointing a thumb to back of the truck where she could see various containers strapped and locked down, including the one she'd brought on the flight here.
"Wait, then why couldn't we bring Betty?" She asked.
"Cause it's heavy as shit, the ATF would make us an entire book on paperwork, and no." Rose countered.
"-but"
"
No," He repeated, "You don't need to bring Big Betty everywhere."
Prince scowled, "When we get swarmed by unholy demons from the nether realm, I'll blame you."
"First," Rose held up a finger, "That's why I brought the Peacemaker and the Medicine kit."
Prince opened her mouth to respond, but Rose cut her off.
"Second, Worst case scenario we have the experiment." He ticked off another finger. "Third, you have
never needed or used Big Betty to her fullest extent."
"Not. Even. Once."
Prince scowled, but had to admit he had a point. Even if only technically.
"Fine," she grumbled, "But I still think we'd be safer with it around. With magic, you never know what's gonna come around the corner."
Rose shrugged and didn't argue the point any further.
"...So, this place reminds you of better days?" he said, changing the subject.
Captain Prince grunted at her partner's question.
"I wouldn't say better." She commented. "Different, sure, but that was a different time."
"Oh?" He remarked, "Isn't that what old folks love to do, reminisce about the old days?"
"Well, to be honest it-" Prince paused, running through his words again.
"I'm not old, jackass!" She slapped him on the shoulder.
Rose just laughed it off and kept driving, "You're a spirit of glory, you kinda have to be old by definition, Prince."
She frowned, mostly because he had a point. A large factor in a spirit like herself being able to attain enough power to reach sentience was age. Things like fame, prestige, and worship, whatever form that may take, came in to play too, but in order for it to really make something of the world it needed to be done over time.
"I'm not
that old." She corrected herself.
Which was true. She was actually one of the younger structural spirits, in the grand scheme of things.
"I only self-actualized a couple of decades ago."
She realized that had been the wrong thing to say when Rose belted out a roar of laughter.
"Do you even hear yourself?" He snorted, " 'a couple of decades ago',
Ha!"
"Hey!" She poked him in the shoulder, "
You're older than me. How are you gonna call me old?"
"I don't reminisce about the 80's" He pointed out.
"Tch," she'd really dug herself into a hole with that one. "Fucking kids these days. 80's weren't even that long ago."
Rose smirked. "Ok boomer."
"I'm not even a-! That doesn't-! I can't even-!" She looked at him with apoplectic fury. The man just kept on driving with that damnable smile. "ARGH!"
She yelled, throwing her hands up in defeat.
"God damn millennials."
Rose just laughed in his seat.
She huffed and looked out her window.
"Can't you go any faster?" She asked as she tried to peer through the fog. She couldn't see overly much, but she could certainly feel that they were moving well under the speed limit.
"Well, unlike
somebody, if I slam into an 18 wheeler, I go
squish." He countered, "We can't all have armor plating."
Prince grunted and stared out the window glumly. "It just feels like this is taking forever to get anywhere."
"Yeah, well this is some of the thickest soup I've ever driven through. It's almost as bad as driving through a blizzard." Rose countered.
Prince had to admit he had a point. Even she thought it was a bit thick. She peered through it, trying to make sense of the fuzzy and indistinct shapes just outside of reach. It was almost like they were in a bubble dropped in another world. Like just a few feet away from her, the rules of reality stopped working, that just out of sight the unthinkable was moving and shifting around her. Even now, the cars and pedestrians moving around created shifting shadows, warped by her own imagination into the barest glimpses of nightmarish monsters. It was almost like-
She frowned.
"Hold on," she said seriously, all humor gone from her voice.
Her partner noticed, tensing up and refining his focus on the world around him. "What's wrong?"
"Give me a sec…" Prince said as she loosened her hold on her mortal senses. She opened her eyes and looked,
really looked into the fog.
What she saw made her grimace.
"This isn't normal fog." She finally said.
"How bad?" Rose didn't even need to question her judgment, he just rolled with the evolving situation.
"Looks like the whole place is saturated with the darker flavors of aether. It kinda feels like a conduit to the ethereal plane has opened up, and it's all leaking into the material."
"Isn't that what the eclipse does? That's why we're doing Operation Axiom today." He argued.
"Yeah, but eclipses happen all the time. Aetheric fog
doesn't."
"Point," He nodded. "Want to call it in?"
"Yeah," She said, getting out her phone and prepping a call, "doing that right now."
"The local branch of the BPRD is probably already on it. I haven't really been in touch with them or anything, but San Fran's a major city. There's no way they'd just let something like this slide." He added.
Prince sighed, hoping he was right. When the phone finally connected, she held up a hand to silence him.
"
Hello! Welcome to Deseret Hotels and Resorts! " chirped an annoyingly upbeat synthesized female voice. "
If you are looking for the nearest branch, please press 1. If you would like to reserve a stay at one of our-"
"Captain Eris Prince, 7658," She recited from routine.
When she opened her mouth next, her lips didn't move, but a series of sounds came from them nonetheless. It sounded like hundreds, possibly even thousands of voices all speaking at once in some incomprehensible dialect. Rose twitched at the way the unnatural sound scratched his ear, but otherwise brushed it off, long since used to it.
Her jaw clicked shut a moment later, and Prince went back to waiting, as if she'd done nothing special at all.
"
...Greetings, Captain Prince." The same voice responded. "
What is the nature of this communication?"
"Agent Rose and I are in San Francisco right now," She answered, "About to do some testing on the prototype and take a look at Project Hotel."
"While here we noticed the bay area was enveloped by a thick fog. On further inspection, it appears the fog is magical in nature. The whole thing's stuffed with aether. Feels like it's straight from the ethereal plane." She glanced at her partner, "Beyond the eclipse, no known cause."
"
...understood Captain Prince. The situation is known to us. Local Branch Agents are already investigating it."
"Do we need to assist?"
"
...no. The current branch has it well in hand. We will let you know if your expertise is required."
She frowned, but wasn't terribly surprised either. "Alright. We'll keep an ear out if we're needed."
The voice didn't respond. Instead, the call just cut out and died. Her phone's screen stuttered for a moment. When it returned to normal, there was no trace that any such call had ever occurred.
Prince glanced at her partner for his thoughts.
Rose noticed, and shrugged. "Not our ballpark. We got no leads on any of this. We've got no idea if this has anything to do with Operation Axiom or Project Orpheus. There are hundreds of rituals that could abuse the Eclipse. And on top of all of that, it's not like the people working on it don't know what they're doing. You gotta trust 'em"
She had to admit, he had a point.
"Alright," She huffed, reclining in the chair fitfully, "If we're not going to help investigate what's happening, and we still got hours until the eclipse or our scheduled time at the range, what do we do now?"
"Oh…I have an idea…"
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The salted sea breeze of San Francisco blew through her hair gently, sending a familiar feeling through her being. She breathed in deeply, taking in the sun, the sea, and the screams.
"Oh My God! Is that Johnny Depp?"
"I need a selfie with him!"
"Oh my god, hashtag trending, hashtag blessed!"
Prince just closed her eyes and sighed.
"Hey," Rose asked asked, a measure of genuine concern entering his voice. "You gonna be alright?"
"Yeah," She waved it off, "Just wondering where your generation went wrong."
She looked up at Rose accusingly.
"My generation?" He rumbled, raising a lone brow. "What are you talking about?"
Prince gestured to the teens with a wave of her hand.
Rose frowned, "That's not my generation."
"You raised them," Prince countered.
"No, pretty sure that was gen x," Rose argued, "Besides, I'm pretty sure every generation has a 'we are literally the worst' phase."
Captain Prince opened her mouth to protest, but then she remembered a few things she'd caught her sailors do in WWII.
And in 'Nam.
...And in Iraq.
…
...And in the 1800's
"Okay," She huffed, "Maybe you have a point." She shot the schoolgirls, now pouting over the fact that the completely ordinary person was not, in fact, Johnny Depp. "Still can't help but feel like they're especially stupid these days."
"You sure it's not something else?" He asked.
"Next Customer!" A voice at the counter shouted.
The man perked up, attention snapping to the food stand like a dog to a squirrel.
"Really Rose?" She questioned.
"Don't judge me, Prince," He shot back, "I am but a mere mortal who requires subsistence."
Prince rolled her eyes, but followed him to the food truck regardless. "You're a glutton who burns through all his hazard pay on food."
"I mean," He began, walking up to the truck, "What else would I spend it on?"
"Hello there!" The cashier greeted them with a smile and a light hispanic accent, "What can I get for you?"
"I'm hoping for a wonderful experience. See, I heard that this was
the place to go in the city for the best fish tacos I've ever had." Rose gave the man a wide grin, "Fresh from the sea? Family recipes? Actual passion instead of that drip fed machine processed academy grade restaurant nonsense for the snobby elite?"
At Rose's words the cook leaned down and matched his look with an eager grin of his own, "Yeah, hombre. We get use salmon caught fresh that morning. Hell, that shit was still swimming around just a few hours before we serve it up to you."
"Cook it up with some beans, add in a dash of chili to add in some spice, you know? Give it some kick."
"Nice, nice," Rose nodded along, grin getting wider and wider.
"Put some avocado salsa on it, helps cool things down, and then drizzle a bit of lime juice on the whole thing to give a dash of zest, yeah?"
"Oh yeah," Rose nodded, and Prince could tell he was completely sold on them. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a wad of cash, "I'll take six."
The cook smiled widely.
"Excellent."
A few minutes later Rose and Prince were sitting at a table, Rose with his collection of fish tacos, and Prince with her large case staring flatly at him.
He pointedly ignored her look as he instead focused on enjoying his fish tacos as slowly as he could.
Finally, Prince spoke up.
"Are we going to be here all day?"
"No," He dismissed the idea easily, "you've seen the schedule. I'm keeping to it."
She grudgingly had to admit he was right. He was kind of being a dick about it, depending on how you looked at it, but he
was being fair.
"Fine," She huffed, "I just…"
"You're bored?" Rose guessed.
"Irritated more like." She answered. "I mean, we have most the day off besides the testing at the Alameda bomb range. We each agreed on having three hours to do whatever and you're spending it on just...driving around looking mundane things and eating food."
"We're in San Francisco!" She exclaimed, waving her arms around the area, "This place is amazing! There are so many things we could see or do! Hell, we could spend that time blowing stuff up at the bomb range, they said we could spend the rest of the day there if we wanted."
"Sure," Rose shrugged, finishing off his latest taco and taking a sip from his cup. "But I don't wanna."
"Why not?"
"Because, you know, sometimes I just want to sit back, relax, and enjoy the view, you know?" He said. "I mean, you know what our job description is?"
"Deal with weird shit, try not to die." She answered drily.
"
Exactly" Rose nodded emphatically, "All I'm saying is that our job's a little nuts sometimes, and it's nice to enjoy the more mundane things in life."
"Are you saying the Golden Gate Bridge isn't mundane?" Prince questioned. "I seem to recall it being a great mundane achievement."
"And if our track record is anything to go by, before the day's end we'll have fought on it." He smiled thinly.
Prince frowned, "I thought I was your lucky charm?"
"Oh, you are," He explained, "You start with bad luck to bring me into the burning festering pile of shit, but then give me
just enough good luck to get out the other side with my sanity intact."
Prince rolled her eyes, but dropped the point.
"Anyways, you seem more irritable than usual," Rosesaid, brushing past the previous issue and cutting to the heart of the matter. "What's really eating at you?"
She waved him off, "Don't worry about me, Rose. Just lost in my memories."
Rose's frown deepened, "Memories? 'Bout this place?" He looked around the area.
The two were in an area of the city filled with small restaurants, bakeries, cafe's, and food trucks.
"I mean, I like this place, but last I checked, you weren't a foodie." He smirked.
"I'm not," Prince muttered, "It's not this, it's the bay area. San Francisco, it's...it's a powerful place for spirits. Me, especially."
He frowned then snapped his fingers. "Right, you were in that movie. The one with the whale probe, right?"
She snorted, "Sorta."
A lone brow rose it's way over his glasses. "Sorta?"
"I wasn't actually there, I was at sea. That was Ranger." She actually scowled at that, "You know I'm still hung up on that. This close to being in my damn own movie and I miss it thanks to fucking scheduling"
"Ah," Rose nodded, understanding the real issue, "I'm guessing this isn't just about scheduling?"
"What do you mean?" She frowned.
"You're a spirit," He shrugged, "A spirit of glory. You're literally made of what people think about you. It's what makes you who you are. And the fact is, a lot of people think you did something that never happened."
"Kinda makes you question your own existence, doesn't it?"
Prince glared at a puddle with a stern look, examining the face she'd taken in the reflection. The tan skin and brown hair was all temporary. Even the narrow jaw and high cheekbones were things she'd chosen to wear. The twinkling lights buried within the shadow of her cap reminded her of her inhuman existence. It reminded her that she'd never have something that came naturally to all humans.
"I remember being there." She finally spoke up. "But...I also remember...being somewhere else."
"Complicated, huh?" Rose asked
"I remember so many things that don't line up with reality, or so many times reality seems to disappoint compared to what I know. It's…" She pursed her lips, staring at her reflection as she parsed her thoughts. She looked at the way the lights twisted and shifted. How they winked in and out of existence with every thought. She'd tried counting them once, but it always changed.
"Well," he shrugged, "welcome to life knowing magic exists. Shit's complicated."
Prince let out a bitter laugh. "Sure," She said, flickering her 'eyes' back up at him.
"Is that why you wanted to visit her?" He asked, gesturing to the pamphlet in her hands.
She looked down and read the cover again.
"The Sea Air and Space Museum of Alameda," Prince read off. "See the ship that recovered Apollo 11."
Unable to help herself, she cracked a smile. "Yeah, yeah I guess I did."
"She an old friend?" He guessed, scratching his chin.
Prince chuckled, "No, Rose. More than a friend." She looked back fondly at the cover. "A sister."
Rose whistled.
"A sister, eh? I suppose that'd be nice. Really help you get your head on straight."
Prince shot him a caustic look and he held his hands up in surrender.
"Look, we're here for a reason, right?"
Prince eyed the large case leaning behind next to her chair carefully. She wasn't particularly worried about anyone just picking it up and running away with it, the thing was 6 ft tall and 150 lbs. The fact she could carry it in one hand with ease was thanks to the literal power of hopes and dreams.
"The test at the bomb range, and Project Hotel." She responded, nodding along. "It's the second part of it that's got me on edge. It's been a while since I've...seen her? Talked with her?"
Prince scratched her head, "I'm not really sure how to interpret those times through a human lens. It doesn't exactly translate well."
Rose shrugged, "Well, if you're sister's anything like mine, she'll be grumpy that you haven't talked in a while. Yank your ear off yapping about ditching her and being practically a ghost. But in the end…"
He smiled wistfully, looking off into the mist-filled bay. "In the end, she's family. She'll love you all the same."
"If only it was that simple…" Prince sighed.
Rose nodded thoughtfully, turning over his partner's words in his mind. "Well, in this human's expert opinion, you've got a bad case of the melancholy."
"Big surprise," She said drily, "Got anything else for me?"
"Yep!" He chirped, and held out a fish taco.
She stared at it with visible confusion.
"I'm sorry?"
"Comfort food," He explained, "it's how we humans deal with our various existential crises. We bury it in food until we stop worrying about it."
"I'm aware,"
"And when you dine with friends, it makes it all the better." Rose grinned, "It's a tradition as old as time."
"I know, Rose," She sighed tiredly, "I know. Kinda got a lot of experience there."
"So?" He asked, holding out a fish taco to her.
Prince narrowed her many eyes at him. Rose merely smiled back.
"Fine," she grunted, taking the taco from his calloused hands.
"Don't even know why I'm doing this," She grumbled, turning it around in her hands, "I don't even need-"
She stopped, mouth clamped down on the taco, her eyes wide and body stunned.
"Eh?" Rose leaned forward with a smug grin.
Prince put the taco down and just chewed in silence, staring out into the ocean waves with a long gaze.
"Fuck, that's good."
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A/n:
Alright, second chapter. Getting into some bits about the world-building and how the magic system here works.
And ominous fog is ominous.
If all goes well next chap'll be out sunday.
So...probably not anytime soon, knowing me.