daґlёиє (
rootaccess) wrote2016-08-22 04:15 am
Entry tags:
FOR: OUTOFCONTROL
Darlene could have waited around for Elliot to actually arrive back at his apartment, in the way that a normal sibling would have. She could have even shot off a text to the other to at least warn him that she was coming by, but that was another thing that a normal sister would have done and Darlene had long since proved that she was nothing that could have been considered a ‘normal sister’. But, when it all came down to it, were the Aldersons really a normal family to begin with? No, they hadn’t been for as long as Darlene could remember and they probably wouldn’t ever be again. Not with how much had gone on over the course of the years; the cold and uncaring attitude of their mother, the untimely and sudden death of their father, the slow deteriorating of Elliot’s sanity and eventual forgetting of… everything.
Normalcy was long gone, she’d come to terms with that.
So, what did Darlene the not-so-normal-sister decide to do instead of alerting her brother to her sudden arrival? Break in to his place, of course. Wasn’t that what any good sibling did when they wanted to order pizza, get high and watch cheap horror flicks? What she hadn’t been expecting when she’d finally managed to jimmy the lock open (a new one that Elliot had installed, probably in hopes that it would prevent her from doing exactly what she was doing at the moment.) was to see someone already sitting in her spot on the couch.
Was she in the wrong building?
Was she on the wrong floor?
Had she just broken into the entirely wrong apartment?
No. It couldn’t be. It looked just the right amount of shitty apartment to belong to none other than Elliot Alderson. But the guy that was on the couch… was not the wide-eyed, shifty figure of her brother.
“Uh. Okay... Who the hell are you?” She questioned, kicking the door closed with her foot, a pair of heart-shaped sunglasses pushed up onto the top of her head so that she could look at this mystery person without the dark tint of her lenses obscuring her vision.
Normalcy was long gone, she’d come to terms with that.
So, what did Darlene the not-so-normal-sister decide to do instead of alerting her brother to her sudden arrival? Break in to his place, of course. Wasn’t that what any good sibling did when they wanted to order pizza, get high and watch cheap horror flicks? What she hadn’t been expecting when she’d finally managed to jimmy the lock open (a new one that Elliot had installed, probably in hopes that it would prevent her from doing exactly what she was doing at the moment.) was to see someone already sitting in her spot on the couch.
Was she in the wrong building?
Was she on the wrong floor?
Had she just broken into the entirely wrong apartment?
No. It couldn’t be. It looked just the right amount of shitty apartment to belong to none other than Elliot Alderson. But the guy that was on the couch… was not the wide-eyed, shifty figure of her brother.
“Uh. Okay... Who the hell are you?” She questioned, kicking the door closed with her foot, a pair of heart-shaped sunglasses pushed up onto the top of her head so that she could look at this mystery person without the dark tint of her lenses obscuring her vision.

no subject
Either way, John let out a slightly tense laugh as he glanced from one of them to the other a few more times, then zeroed in on Darlene again. If this was a joke at his expense, she wasn't cracking, and he couldn't see Elliot being such a good actor. It seemed like she was dead serious.
"Damn," he murmured, looking her over like she'd just walked into the room for the first time and he definitely liked what he saw. "You've got hidden depths. But you never need to ask if I'm hungry, it's my default, and I'll eat anything."
no subject
He didn't even bother to say anything, rubbing his hands over his head and trying to keep his thoughts from spiraling completely out of control. How the fuck could she'd been so careless to just say some shit like that in front of someone she didn't know. It's not like the shit they were in was child's play.
If Darlene weren't my sister, I probably would lose it right now.
Luckily, the family bond means something to me.
Elliot finally turned away from the two, his hands still on his head as he stared at the desk and forced himself to take a few deep breaths. But that anxiety that was always thrumming under the edge was pushing forward a bit.
"Fuck," he muttered under his breath, shaking his head. It's not like he was worried John would rat them out. That was the least of his worries. He felt responsible for the kid and the more he knew the more Elliot was responsible and the more danger he was putting him into just by knowing him.
"Order something. And then Flipper probably needs to go out."
If John got the hint, Elliot could comfortably get his morphine fix, calm down and not kill Darlene when they talked. If not, Elliot wasn't sure what he was going to do. After the first time he really didn't particularly like doing morphine when John was around. The same way half the time he wouldn't smoke around him either.
no subject
“Sweet, so I’ll order us some Greek. I’m craving some Baklava right now, I could probably eat the entire place out of it. This guy has got some serious cash, so I might as well just had them deliver the entire menu, right?” She laughed, scrolling through the list of entrees on her phone, trying to decide what to have delivered. The scariest part about the statement that left Darlene’s lips was that she was just crazy enough to do it —this guy in question may not have wronged her in any way, but that wouldn’t have been a thought that stopped her from milking every last cent from his checking and savings. In the grand scheme of it all, he worked for the corporation that they were in the middle of bringing down, so he was a part of the problem. A little pawn in the chess match and the only way to win was to collect all of them before attacking the Queen herself.
She’d checked him out, too. Dug deeper and discovered that he was the kind of scummy guy with a wife and kids, who was faking his identity on thousands of dating sites just for the chance to get laid. She was doing a public service by clearing out his bank account, guys like him deserved it as far as Darlene was concerned.
“And I brought you a present, too." She grinned deviously at the screen of her phone as Elliot occupied himself with his computer. “So, stop staring at me like you hate me or something, because I promise that you’ll like it. All these rich fucks have a lot nicer things than giant account balances, you know."
no subject
He sure got that hint, though, loud and clear. If Elliot needed to be left alone with Darlene... well, John could see why, and he didn't think it would be any major threat to him now. By the looks of things, Darlene had adjusted to the idea of his being here (and maybe even liked him a bit, if that last look she'd given him was any indication, and he was absolutely arrogant enough to believe it was), so she wasn't likely to convince Elliot this was all fucking insane while John was out.
"Yeah, it's been awhile. C'mon, Flipper, get off your ass." He slid into his shoes, got the leash hooked onto Flipper's collar, and ducked out the door. They'd go for an actual walk, he thought, not just to let Flipper do her business.
no subject
"What the fuck were you thinking? I haven't told him shit about what we do," Elliot said, the words coming out fast. He was worried and he was definitely jonesing a bit. Still that didn't mean he was a junkie. He pushed away from the computer table and moved to sit in front of the coffee table where he started his routine. The familiarity of it was relaxing in and of itself and it kept him from strangling his sister.
"Do you know how long it took to make him think I was like sorta normal?"
Darlene wasn't going to give a shit about any of that he was sure. Especially since she clearly had something she had to get off her chest to him.
no subject
“Oh, what are you like Elliot Alderson by day and The Amazing Hacker-Man by night?” She snorted in laughter, her eyes rolling as she shifted in her seat to start digging through the contents of her book bag. “Well, for one, you picked up some rando from off the streets, so I’m pretty sure he doesn’t think you’re exactly normal, and the fact that you’ve got some kid here now doesn’t mean we still don’t have work to do. Are you still gonna go with the whole ‘I’ve got some mysterious night job’ spiel? For a dude working two jobs, you certainly are living large in here."
Retrieving a small sandwich baggie from somewhere in the depths of her bag, she held it up triumphantly for Elliot to see — and, of course, wasn’t the least bit fazed by his entire morphine routine, he was a grown ass man and was free to do as many recreational drugs as he saw fit. Besides, she knew how much his sanity teetered on actually taking them, and if Elliot was a sane and functioning individual while being doped up, then who was she to stop him? “Anyway, I told you I had a present for you. This guy could have opened up a pharmacy with the kind of shit he had."
The bag contained a plethora of drugs, both illegal and legal, the most important of which to Darlene were two tightly rolled joints and a small vial of Elliot’s crushed white powder of choice. “And, yours truly also managed to get a copy of all his contacts from his business phone, which I’m currently tracking on my own as we speak; every number he dials is now ours, every email he gets is now ours and every network key he types in is also ours. So, I think a ‘Thank you, Darlene, oh gracious and dearest sister of mine.’ is now in order here."
no subject
He didn't stop his whole routine even when he saw Darlene holding up a mini pharmacy. "What the shit is even in there?" Elliot asked her, though he was less bothered -- and by that, not bothered at all -- than the confession to hacking. Well, it's not like he could complain about the goodie bag at all but he was still frustrated with her.
He also couldn't complain about the source she'd created. "Good job," Elliot said, finishing the routine of getting the morphine ready which was ridiculously OCD and a strict regimen that he gave to it. That was part of the not being a junkie part. "Anything else I should know before he comes back? Because fuck if you're letting anything else slip to him."
He meant it.
"And do you really want to watch another shitty movie here?"
The morphine was already doing it's job, the tension and anxiety starting to ease, the exposed nerve that was his existence protected for the moment.
no subject
‘Good job’. Good. Job. So, it wasn’t the gracious praise that she had been searching for, but in the language that was Elliot Alderson a ‘good job’ might as well have been the most sincerest thing that he could have told her — he was on edge, and it was somewhat the majority of her fault, so she really couldn’t expect him to go laying on all the praise and compliments for her undercover work disguised as a sleazy one night stand at the moment. “Aren’t you just Mr. Pleasant today? Yeah, there’s something else. Have you gotten a chance to look into you little houseguest, yet?"
She paused, but hardly long enough to allow Elliot to answer, once Darlene started on a tangent, it was usually difficult for anyone to get a word in edgewise.
“I’m gonna assume that you haven’t, since you’re trying to be Elliot the normal or whatever. So I’ll fill you in, he doesn’t really have much online — no Twitter, no FaceBook, no Tumblr, not even a fucking MySpace. I know the kid was homeless, but usually there’s at least some kind of footprint somewhere. It’s weird.” Popping the bag open, she dug out one of the joints from inside of it, placing it between her lips and then rummaging through the pocket of her jacket for a lighter. “Allerdyce. I didn’t try too many spellings; A-L-L-E-R-D-I-C-E didn’t bring up much, a bunch of random guys who don’t look anything like him or even related to him, so… maybe try out a few different ones if you’re gonna go looking.” She shrugged, she’d done all the digging that she felt like doing at the moment — maybe when she was back somewhere private with her laptop she would do a little more, if only for the sake of looking out for Elliot.
And, okay, for the sake of being a nosy bitch.
“Why not? You got something better to do tonight? You and Kid Icarus got reservations somewhere?” She laughed, lighting up the end of the joint and taking a long hit from it.
no subject
Everyone loved the sound of their own voice, except him. And that hallucination's voice that was also his voice in a way. He hated those voices and wished they'd both go the fuck away.
"No." Literally nothing on the agenda.
"He should be back soon... How long on the food?" Not that he was hungry but if John was and Darlene was then obviously the food needed to get there faster. "give me the coke. You should offer some of the lighter shit to him. He ain't like us though."
no subject
That was real crime. Stealing a couple thousands from someone might as well have been child’s play in comparison.
“Atta boy. That’s what I like hearing. Just don’t take it all, okay? I actually want to try some of that later.” Deft fingers dug through the bag, retrieving a small vial of finely ground cocaine and gently tossing over to Elliot. “And, look at you. Taking in some kid off the streets, and letting me fill him up with illegal substances, we’re really just a shining example of responsible adults, aren’t we? This is probably why we never had any kids… that and I can’t stand those noisy little fuckers.” Another laugh echoed out of her, examining the substances inside of the bag once more, as though trying to decide which one would be the best to give to John once he finally arrived back with Flipper.
“I’ll let him have his pick, and make sure that he stays away from the hard stuff. I don’t wanna be held accountable if he ends up trying to eat your face off or something later."
no subject
Things looked fine, though. Elliot and Darlene seemed to be getting along again. Siblings were weird, he'd always known that in a distant way, even if he had no real life experience to know what that weirdness looked like. Knowing his family, he would've gotten a fucked up picture of it if he'd had a sibling anyway.
"No shit on your pillow tonight, man. You're welcome. So what did we - whoa." The bag in Darlene's hand stunned him to silence, jaw dropping as he squinted at the contents. That was a very, very large assortment of drugs. Cocking his head to one side, he glanced at Elliot, then lifted a hand to point at Darlene. "Just checking, don't wanna cause any more offense: she's not a junkie either?"
no subject
"She's totally a junkie and a deviant and other things that a brother can't say about his sister," there was a hint of a smile though because she wasn't any more a junkie than he was so clearly not a junkie. They were both completely functional human beings who just had shit for pasts.
"There's some light shit in there if you want any. You'll need it with the god awful movie she's going to make us watch."
no subject
“Yeah, go ahead, take you pick.” She held the bag up for John to have a closer look, shaking the contents around inside of it in an attempt to spread them out a little within their confined plastic space. “Word of caution, if you don’t know what is it, then you probably shouldn’t go asking for it. I’m not being blamed if you start tripping out and thinking the floor is lava or something."
Darlene paused, looking over at Elliot with an all too amused expression. “Listen to me, I almost sound responsible. And Prophecy isn’t that bad… It’s a classic 80’s Frakenheimer cyborg bear horror. You gotta give it a chance."
Yeah, she was really selling it with that description.
no subject
"Right," he muttered to himself as he sat cross-legged on the floor, snatching up the bag on his way down. "Now this is happening. I dunno what any of this is, the people where I sleep smoke shit or shoot it right into their veins, not this." Wait - he shook it all to one side, then arched an eyebrow. "Except weed. Obviously I know weed."
He glanced from one of them to the other like he kept finding himself doing since Elliot had gotten home, like he was constantly watching a tennis match. "So? Recommendations?"
no subject
The switch very temporarily switched. It'd probably hit him ten times as hard soon enough. He probably wouldn't sleep much tonight. The price you pay for moments like this.
He kept his eyes on the other two except when he leaned to snort the line he'd set out carefully. He cleared his throat slightly before leaning back again. "And that movie still sounds even more awful now, Darlene."
no subject
“Okay, listen and listen good, because this is the kind of shit they don’t teach you but they really should. Those colorful little pills are Molly, they’ll make you feel pretty good, but it’ll probably get kinda weird and you’ll keep asking us to touch you and that’s not really a road I wanna go down today — we just met. There’s a couple prescription meds in there; they’ve all pretty much got the names on them; Xanax and Ambien will knock you out, unless you can stay awake and then you’ll feel pretty good. Adderall will keep you up, kinda like speed. The white powder stuff is for Elliot. He’s got some coke there if you wanna try that. And… there might be a tab of acid in there, if you’re feeling like really tripping balls."
Darlene rattled off the drugs without a moment of hesitation — proving that this was in no way her first foray into the world of illicit substances, which could both be seen as a good and bad thing. But better to have someone well versed in the world of recreational drug use than someone who knew absolutely nothing, right? “Well, too fuckin’ bad. I brought it and unless you got anything better lying around here, then Prophecy it is."
no subject
"I'm not dropping acid," he snickered, imagining how he could react if he hallucinated the wrong thing - the apartment building would go up in seconds, and that'd be a promise to Elliot broken and him back out on the streets. Or in jail, since they'd probably collar him for arson at long last with so many potential witnesses. "Trust me, it's a bad idea, at least indoors."
Even if he was starting to loosen up with Darlene, he wasn't quite ready to tell her he was a mutant yet. He was still quite surprised by how quickly he'd revealed it to Elliot; something about Elliot's blasé reactions to everything made him seem very trustworthy, or at least like he wouldn't even remember for longer than a few minutes.
Finally, he fished out the tablets of Xanax, eyeballing them curiously. Well, he fell asleep without warning his first night here, it wouldn't be that embarrassing if he did it again. Probably the least embarrassing of all the options. He just really didn't want to make an ass of himself in front of what were obviously experienced drug users, make himself look like even more of a child.
no subject
Even without hacking him he'd slowly started to figure him out. Not as thoroughly as he could with a hack but enough.
"I still have the Matrix movies," yes, it'd taken him that long to think of something better than the Prophecy but honestly were those movies that much better? Maybe not.
no subject
Yes. Darlene was attempting to be a good host in a house that wasn’t hers. But that was just Darlene, wasn’t it? She tended to take ownership over whatever place that her body currently occupied and in that moment it was Elliot’s apartment.
Once more she leaned over in her chair to reach the table a short distance away, tossing what little was left of the end of her joint into the ashtray before scooping up a generous amount of the cocaine onto her index finger, and then immediately rubbing it along her top gum line — her entire mouth beginning to tingle in a way that sent a shiver through her body. Her movements already feeling lazy and slowed thanks to the weed that she’d burned through in what could have been considered record time, and she knew that the newly added stimulant would make for a kind of concoction that she was craving at the moment. A paradox that would have her heart and body racing at top speed, but her mind steps behind trying to catch up.
“Whatever, they’re all shit movies. Where are they?” In one fluid motion, she pushed herself up out of the chair, hands poised on her hips as her head turned on a swivel to glance around the apartment — as though the movies would have had some kind of neon sign above them that indicated their location.
no subject
As much as the flash of temper probably looked ridiculous, there was also very real, very irrational and dangerous fury behind it. Elliot knew a bit of what he could do. Darlene didn't, but she was used to a certain kind of madness with him as a brother, so maybe she could sniff out John's madness as well. He was mollified by the kindness that had already been shown to him here, but only so much; he could still turn on a dime, and in that moment it definitely showed, like a tamed stray dog suddenly showing too much teeth when someone got close.
He swallowed the Xanax dry, then pulled his lighter out of his pocket again and started to play with it. Not the incessant clink-clank, because he didn't trust himself to open it, just turning it around and around in the fingers of one hand.
no subject
He rolled his eyes, rubbing his forehead with his free hand and glancing at John again.
"can you two cut the shit out though. I'm having a good night for once," he might've been a bit petulant himself but good nights like this were few and had gotten fewer with how things had changed in recent times, before even John showed up on the doorstep.
no subject
“Look, John. It’s not meant to be an insult or something, calm your shit down a little bit. I get it, you’re a big boy and you tie your own shoes and everything. Don’t take it to heart, got me?” She raised her voice a little, but simply because her back was now to the both of them and she wanted to ensure that she was heard — because if there as anything that Darlene wouldn’t stand for it was talking and not being heard. As though every word that came out of her mouth was of the utmost importance and couldn’t be missed.
And, hello. It was.
“Geesh. You think you’d be a little nicer to somebody who so graciously let you have your pick of their drugs. You dunno the kinda shit I had to do for those.” Darlene tried to sound as ominous as possible, like she had risked life and limb for the little goodie bag that John had been searching through, when in reality she had actually done next to nothing for it. “A-ha! I think these are it.” She called from where she was ducked down and searching through a stack of DVD cases in one corner, most of which were unlabeled bootlegs they had downloaded and burned themselves.
no subject
When she called out that she had found the movies, he slammed the lid of his lighter back down way too fast before she could turn around and pocketed it again.
"Never seen the Matrix movies before. Are they any good?" He sounded a bit more amicable now, at least.
no subject
"Not all that great but Darlene completely loves them. She made me go to every pawn shop in the city until I found the second one."
no subject
It wasn't by far the weirdest thing that she'd been presented with in her life. And, besides, Elliot was weird, maybe he just naturally attracted just as weird people. Like some kind of beacon or bat-signal.
"The first one is actually pretty good, but they turn to absolute shit by the end ." She smiled, her head tilted to the side as she batted her eyelashes at Elliot, as though it was some kind of form of appreciation for her brother. And, in Darlene's own special way, it was. "I didn't make you, you're just so sweet on your precious little sister that you couldn't help but want to make me happy by searching until you did."
Yeah. That was a complete lie. She'd forced him to 100%.
no subject
John had given up on the idea of family being worthwhile so long ago that he couldn't quite work his way up to jealousy or envy. Maybe there was something a bit wistful in his expression as he watched them banter, but - that also could've been the drugs slowing him down already. He didn't really know.
"How old are you two?" He asked suddenly, because Darlene calling herself little sister made him newly curious. The tiny details he didn't know about Elliot were kind of incredible, if not as incredible as how little Elliot knew about him compared to what he could've with a solid hacking session.
no subject
"28."
It was a simple answer and he brought the cigarette to his lips again. "Darlene's actually 3 years old. Pretty tall for her age."
no subject
“It’s true. The doctors were all amazed at how fast I matured. I’m a real miracle case, they’re gonna do a Discovery Channel special on me soon.” She laughed, moving to where Elliot’s television and DVD player were, turning both of them on and plopping herself on the floor in front of them both, waiting for the DVD player to finish the process of actually turning on — for some reason, the more advanced that technology became the longer it took for things to be usable. — finding a stray piece of trash on the floor and tossing it blindly over her shoulder at Elliot.
Likely missing him. She wasn’t some kind of athlete, after all. Nor was she actually looking where she was throwing.
“25."
no subject
He liked it better this way. He'd never been one to let many people into his circle of esteem, to put it very mildly: more accurately put, he hated pretty much everyone. But the Aldersons were alright.
God, he was relaxed. The information that had scrolled constantly across his mind like a news ticker since he'd turned 12 years old - temperatures and potential combustion rates of everything in range, hot spots he could likely manipulate, actual points of ignition like Elliot's cigarette standing out as white-hot pinpoints in his awareness - all of that suddenly seemed to be moving through molasses. A distant smile twisting his lips, he turned around so that his back was facing the couch and leaned back against it, quite close to Elliot's legs but not actually touching them. He was unusually quiet, and had been for a little while aside from his odd questions.
"This is fucking awesome," he finally said in a low, sleepy monotone, not really clarifying just what was so awesome, but it was pretty obvious. Compared to his usual aggressive, probing energy, the air John gave off now was nearly comatose.