Nightshift 42: Bill's Hardware

Jul 19, 2009 14:22

[from here]Lockdown kicked the door to the hardware store down and barged in. There was already a zombie in here, a big one, who the bounty hunter guessed was the owner of the store. There were also two other zombies with him, so Lockdown was already outnumbered. But that had never stopped the bounty hunter ( Read more... )

sho, grell, sechs, hanekoma, tony stark, sakura, kenren, guy, alfred, tenzen, dahlia, tobias, depth charge, sync, jason, wesker, adachi, evangeline, claude, schuldig, sasuke, haruno sakura, luxord, lockdown, yousuke, nataku, tim drake, hk-47

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catstreetblues July 22 2009, 04:07:26 UTC
Sanae's eyes widened when he saw the prybar, his first thoughts being strangely enough something along the lines of Getting my head smashed in - that's preferable to being eaten. But then he got a better look and realized that zombies typically didn't have their jaw set so tightly - or have jaws at all.

"Y-yeah, just one of those nights." Sanae laughed weakly; it didn't seem appropriate at all given the atmosphere. (Yeah, whatever happened to 'enjoy the moment'?)

"Uh..." He caught the shift in the other man's expression and resisted the urge to spray him with a deluge of paint. "Straight back there." Sanae jabbed a thumb in the direction he'd come from. "There's one of 'em waiting, though. I got him in the eyes and well...it wasn't enough, obviously." But that was where that prybar came in handy, he guessed.

Speaking of which, if he was already armed, why did this guy want paint in the first place? It was mostly a deterrent; Sanae had only grabbed some because he'd been looking for some spray paint for a while - the artist in him reacting first. It wasn't like it was -- wait a minute. Suddenly he remembered all the little warning labels he'd always disregarded.

"What, you got matches?"

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i_dont_paint July 22 2009, 04:40:24 UTC
"No," Tony admitted, just a little reluctantly. He hadn't been on the lookout for matches, and though he hadn't had any reason to expect night to fall while they were still in town and leave them stranded amongst teeming hordes of the undead, it now seemed like a definite oversight. "But we're in a hardware store. There's going to be something we could use to start a fire somewhere."

His mind turned over the possibilities; they were endless, really. All they needed was a spark, and the accelerant would do the rest. Of course, aerosols weren't the best forms of makeshift flamethrower out there, but unless they could find something better...

"Did you see any fuel? If I can rig something with a proper seal, I can keep us from getting back-flow." While an explosion of flammable chemicals seemed infinitely preferable to being eaten alive, it was still low on his list of experiences he was looking to have any time in the near future.

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catstreetblues July 22 2009, 05:23:23 UTC
"Uh...uh..." Sanae's head whipped from side to side as he glanced down the darkened aisle. Okay. Zombies weren't coming yet. Right. Think properly. "There's gotta be lighters in here, right? Cheap butane ones - probably near the cashier. Or we could try for a longer utility one." The longer stemmed lighter was probably a better option: more room to prevent accidental hand torching. The one problem was that he had no idea where they were and no proper lighting to figure out any sort of location.

Sanae took a deep breath. He had to stay calm or else things would start going to pieces, starting with his nerves and ending with his sanity. Okay. It was a Game. He had done this before. No. Sweat. "I'll look for a fuel source; make sure we don't explode." Unlike Josh, he couldn't teleport them out of the way of any flares, regardless of level.

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i_dont_paint July 31 2009, 14:40:52 UTC
"Look for a welding torch," Tony directed. "More than one, if you can find them." Mania had all but given way to grim certainty, though there was a little straining at the edges of his expression. Hysteria still threatened somewhere in the back of his mind; the walking dead warred with all things he thought real, and he had not quite reconciled himself with the realities of the situation at the institute as well as he'd thought.

Having a task helped. He knew what he was doing, building things. He'd done it before, rigging weaponry from unlikely pieces. Granted, both the pieces and the workspace had been much more suited to the task, and lacking in zombies, but the principle was the same: survive, get out.

"Watch your back," he said as he turned towards the counter to look for an ignition source. Splitting up might be riskier, but it would make the task shorter, and there was value in that. The sooner they were both armed with something more substantial than paint cans and blunt instruments, the better.

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catstreetblues August 2 2009, 06:44:18 UTC
"Gotcha," Sanae said. He placed the second canister of paint by the man. "I'll leave this with you, then." 'Watch your back'? What an understatement.

There were zombies everywhere, but thankfully there were now more people in the store looting to their hearts' content - which meant more targets that weren't him. Leaving his fellow patients to do the re-killing for him, Sanae raced down the aisles, squinting in the dark as he tried to make out the tools on the shelves.

He'd just made it to a likely section when he heard a loud moan behind him. Just my luck. Without turning to look he spun and sprayed a cloud of paint into the zombie's face before sprinting down the aisle, eyes darting from shelf to shelf as he tried to find a torch before the zombie got to him. By some miracle he managed to make out the outline of a torch head encased in some sort of kit, and Sanae pulled up short to take stock of the options.

Plastic casing was a pain to open unless they had a blade of some kind; the suitcase-type ones seemed a lot easier to deal with, so Sanae grabbed one and spun around.

Now to get past that zombie. The monstrosity was nearly blocking the entire aisle, but thanks to typical zombie behavior, its arms were outstretched and nearly horizontal, giving him some space - by the broadest definition of the world - to maneuver. With a half-mumbled prayer Sanae charged forward, swinging the kit in an attempt to catch the thing off-guard. A decaying hand was smashed aside (he'd just confirmed that two-handed grips indeed increased one's force) and he twisted sideways to avoid the other one, nearly tripping over his feet as he righted himself.

Oh right. They needed fuel. Sanae stopped to grab a gas tank and, focusing all of his strength into his right arm, managed to start dragging it down the aisle. By now he could hear the shuffling of other zombies proceeding from other areas of the store toward him because of the racket, but for whatever reason the god of zombie mechanics had decided to bless the undead with a speed equal to that of an unathletic man dragging a nine-pound tank around, leaving the distance between them a happy constant.

If he made it out of Landel's ever, he'd light some incense for that benevolent deity.

Sanae arrived back to find his partner in the process of constructing their soon-to-be weapon. "Got a whole kit," he said, panting. "Gas tank too. 'Bout five or six zombies behind me." He set the suitcase kit down, flipped open the latches, and opened it to reveal its contents. Torches had never seemed so beautiful.

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i_dont_paint August 2 2009, 19:23:48 UTC
The front counter turned out to be the closer of the two destinations, though reaching it through a minefield of scattered tools, in the dark, with the moans of the undead echoing off the walls was nerve-wracking. By the time Tony made it close enough to put his hands on a sturdy-looking lighter, his heart seemed to have taken up permanent residence in his throat. His pulse was loud enough in his ears that it took the clatter of metal dislodged by a clumsy dead foot to alert him to the lone zombie that had lurched up beside him. He managed to dodge quickly enough to get out of the way of its attempt to grapple, but the bony ends of its fingers dug raw furrows along his neck. He brought the prybar up between them to give leverage to shove it back, and it stumbled on a leg halfway dislocated. Tony swung the prybar, first strike landing off target, and breaking the creature's arm with a sick, wet snap. The second lodged the metal firmly in the creature's skull, and Tony fought down another surge of nausea at the thought of pulling it free. He left it instead; there were more blunt instruments in the store, and the rest of the things seemed occupied with other targets.

He hurried back to the rear of the store, pausing along the way to collect a handful of necessities from the loose bins of screws and bolts and gaskets. Whatever his partner returned with, there was a good chance he'd have to jury-rig a seal for it, and the more components he had to hand, the less time they'd have to spend searching through the corpse-ridden store.

At Sanae's return, Tony looked up from the collection of bolts and gaskets he'd been organizing to useful purpose, and grimaced. "Shit," he muttered. A quick mental calculation gave him the likely time needed to turn torches into flamethrowers, and while it wasn't as large an amount as it could have been, racing against the zombies' approach to do it seemed like a dangerous option.

He pushed to his feet, casting an evaluating gaze over the shelving before striding to the nearest piece of it. "Here, help me tip this. We can use it as a barricade, buy ourselves a little more time."

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catstreetblues August 3 2009, 03:00:02 UTC
"Right." Sanae joined Tony at the shelving and together they were able to tip it over, sending the shelf and its contents crashing to the ground in front of them. He dusted his hands off, eyeing their handiwork with satisfaction. If anything tripped over that mess, it'd be a job well done.

"How much time do you think we've got?" They had several minutes by his own estimate, made in approximately ten seconds.

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i_dont_paint August 3 2009, 03:21:11 UTC
Tony surveyed the mess of toppled shelving and scattered tools. It wasn't, as barricades went, the most solid, but so far the undead had seemed relatively mindless, and he could hope the simple obstacle would keep them at bay for a little while. Or that they'd shed enough parts to be rendered more ineffectual when they did get over the top.

"A few minutes, anyways," he replied. "Maybe more, if they just throw themselves at it. Keep an eye out behind us, in case any of them are smart enough to circle around." They'd hear them first, he thought. Most of them seemed too hell-bent on getting their claws and teeth into anything not already dead to bother much with stealth. They could only hope that would hold.

He knelt back down and began working on the torch set with the tools and parts he'd scavenged. It was dark enough to make it difficult to see what he was doing, and after a few slips, he paused, expression gone from focused to reluctant. They could go searching for a light source...but he had one. He just didn't really want to use it.

The crash of a zombie stumbling over something made up his mind for him. He looked briefly up at Sanae, expression grim. "Keep this quiet," he muttered.

One would be forgiven for wondering about his sanity as he tugged the zipper to his hooded sweatshirt down to beneath his breastbone. One would be forgiven even more for wondering at the pale blue light that streamed out, illuminating a narrow circle around them, first dimly, and then more brightly as he tore away the bandages covering the reactor embedded in his chest. He bent back to his work on the torches, jaw set and hard in the weird illumination.

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catstreetblues August 3 2009, 05:45:41 UTC
"That's what I figured," Sanae said, already glancing into the darkness behind him. Zombies weren't too intelligent as far as he was aware, and dead things didn't typically engage in evolution, but still, vigilance never hurt anyone - especially when the enemy was irritatingly resilient.

He turned back to find Tony acting like a human flashlight - which was new as far as oddities went. Sanae gaped for a few seconds before regaining his poise. "Won't tell a soul," he swore (with his fingers crossed: Joshua would love this.), "but uh...how're you, you know, lighting up exactly?"

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i_dont_paint August 5 2009, 21:20:05 UTC
"Byproduct of an energetic reaction," Tony replied, sounding both dry and distracted. His attention was on the project before him, hands moving apparently of their own volition to dismantle and swap around bits of the torches. A narrow furrow dug itself into the middle of his brow as he squinted at the components, and for once he didn't so much as jump as one of the undead former citizens sent something clattering to the floor a few aisles over.

"Hold this." 'This' was a complicated bit of valve work, small enough to potentially get lost, and round enough to roll if set down carelessly. "The light's incidental, but apparently it comes in handy." There was a hint of self-deprecation in the statement, a hint of bitterness, though he made no attempt to explain either; likely he didn't notice, with most of his attention on assembling weaponry.

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catstreetblues August 6 2009, 06:22:20 UTC
Sanae took whatever was offered to him blankly, not really caring what it was as he watched their flamethrower being gradually constructed. He wasn't too bad at assembling things like this on his own, but at this speed and in the current conditions he would never be able to match what Tony was doing. He'd have to make sure to maintain contact after tonight: this guy was good. Alright, so Tony's talents didn't lie in forging documents like Joshua had requested, but still...assets were assets.

"Hey, you got that light, you might as well use it," Sanae said cheerfully. "Don't waste, after all." Yeah, he could see reasons why he'd keep something like that under wraps, but sometimes those little individual things just had to shine, no pun intended.

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i_dont_paint August 6 2009, 19:33:55 UTC
One corner of Tony's mouth curved a bit, into a grin which should have been lopsided and boyish, but was turned eerie by the strange light. "It's not exactly subtle," he noted. Nor was he, really, but the complaint amused him to make. And it was more of a concern right now than it would usually have been, though having had a look at some of the zombies, he wasn't sure they really did track with their eyes.

His shoulders tensed as something thudded against the other side of their makeshift barricade, and he looked critically at the not-quite-yet-a-flamethrower before him. It was a definite race against time, and he redoubled his efforts to complete the project, determined to win.

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catstreetblues August 7 2009, 04:07:51 UTC
"Aw, come on...who's ever heard of a subtle power? Something like that, it'd really suck," Sanae replied. "Subtle's weak." And there he went with his half-joking, half-teasing routine. So easy- and it really did help take the mind off of the undead corpses that were coming to gnaw their faces off. Really.

Speaking of zombies..."Oh geez." Sanae twitched when he heard a dull thud on the outside of their barricade. "Already?" He knelt down to find something blunt and heavy while still keeping a firm grip on the piece of machinery Tony had entrusted to him for the moment. "Actually wishing for my feathers, wow," the barista muttered, almost too soft to hear. He twisted to face Tony. "Tell me when I gotta give this back." He waved the valve-thing briefly.

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i_dont_paint August 9 2009, 00:55:39 UTC
Though he didn't voice direct agreement with the sentiment, Tony's grin broadened. And then abruptly vanished at the thud against the makeshift barricade. Any response he'd been intending to make was lost beneath redoubled effort, and not long had passed before he held his hand up for the valve. "Here, hand it over. I'm almost done."

He ratcheted the valve into place once it had been handed back, and twisted tight the sections of the re-purposed torch before connecting it to fill with fuel. He did not quite hold his breath as the seconds ticked down, but his mental count became more urgent.

The rasp of the lighter as he finally lit the pilot flame was almost lost beneath the sounds of the shambling undead. There was no resulting fireball, and Tony let out a low, relieved breath. "So far, so good."

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catstreetblues August 10 2009, 06:23:09 UTC
Sanae handed the valve back when it was asked for and then watched with bated breath as Tony lit the flame, preparing to throw himself backwards just in case. Thankfully, nothing flared in the wrong direction. "Yeah, haven't blown ourselves up yet. Great sign." So they had their fire. Now to torch things.

"What's the next step? Is it pretty much ready to go?" There was some excitement in his voice, but mostly he was starting to worry that the zombies would finally pile up enough behind their barricade to knock it over before they were ready. And PVC pipe only did so much.

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i_dont_paint August 10 2009, 15:31:30 UTC
"We're ready to go," Tony confirmed, levering himself to his feet as he said it. He forced a grin, keeping it in place through sheer stubbornness, and tried very hard not to consider any similarities between this and the last time he'd had to make his way out of a sticky situation through improvised means.

Their readiness came not a moment too soon; the makeshift barricade trembled under the thudding weight of several zombies. Tony backed up, eyes fixed on a barrier that seemed suddenly flimsy. "We need to get closer to the door. Stay behind me."

Much as he wasn't averse to sending up the store and its complement of zombies, provided nothing else would get them out of there in one piece, he wasn't really sanguine about doing so while there were still living people in it. Let alone by accident.

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