I found him one night - waited for one where he'd just come out of a bar, so he'd be easier to handle. [ Jack leans back, not looking at her anymore. ] This was in Nevada, right, dead of summer, so it was a hot night and he wasn't wearing his colors. Nobody did. You might wear an armband or something, coordinate your outfit, but seriously, try wearing leather in hundred degree weather.
[ Whoops, let him get another drink. ]
So, right - you used to be able to buy these fake police lights pretty easy. So I followed him until we hit a pretty shit neighborhood and pulled him over. You know nobody living around there is gonna do jack shit if they think cops are around. Pulled him over, dragged him out of the car, and bounced his head off the car door until he got more manageable. Stuck him in the trunk. You know, car trunks get so goddamn hot. Must have been miserable.
[ Now he glances over again, fingers lacing and unlacing. ]
[She's so wildly out of her depth. He wasn't wearing his colors, Jack says, and it honestly takes her half a second to realize that he means gang colors. He was in a gang, and Jack likely was too-- of course he was. My leather jacket days, he'd once called his younger years, but she hadn't realized quite how literal he'd meant it.
Not to mention the story itself is fairly awful. But it's also nothing she wasn't prepared for, and though she's got a tight grip on her glass, there's no hesitation in her nod.]
I'll tell you to stop if I need you to. Keep going.
Aight. Not much left to tell anyway. [ A breath. ] Well, I take him to this construction site - bad part of town, dead of night, yadda yadda, you get the picture. Nobody's there. I pull him out and... hell, I dunno how long I beat him, but it was a while. Just with my hands, nothing too fancy. Good thing I wore gloves back then, because my knuckles were bruised all to hell later.
[ He even shakes out his hand, as if shrugging off phantom pain. ]
And I strangled him. Took a while. You ever kill somebody, don't strangle 'em - you'll be there all goddamn day, and that's if you can even manage squeezing that tight in the first place. [ Another sip, another shrug. ] Threw his body in a cement mixer, kicked it on, and left. I'll let you imagine what a cement mixer does to a human body.
Like I said, it didn't make me feel any better. Kind of a huge waste of time, actually.
[ If he's sounding less and less remorseful as he goes on, he doesn't seem to notice. ]
[It's not as if she thinks the man in question didn't deserve his fate. He was a murderer himself, and quite likely had wracked up any number of crimes besides. It wasn't as if Jack had killed a preacher or saint.
But there's something just a little chilling about the fact that his voice has gone from understandable dullness to something far more casual. Huge waste of time, like he'd gone halfway across town to pick up a prescription instead of snuffed out a life and shoved the body into a cement mixer.
Absently, her fingers slide against her own neck.]
Well.
[Good lord.]
Is the murder itself the ammo, or the fact that it didn't help?
Either-or. It's something I don't talk about much, obviously, so I guess it's just something I don't have any walls against?
[ Shrug!! ]
Also, I told Ardyn. Figured you should know if we're all in on this little experiment thingadoo. Wouldn't want that little factoid popping up out of nowhere.
[She's not surprised, not if she thinks about it. He's an easy person to talk to, and as far as she knows, he and Jack are fairly close anyway.]
Mm, to say the least.
. . . I was going to evoke all that. I'm going to, I suppose.
[She drains her glass again, blinking hard as the alcohol hits her. She's not a particularly large woman and that's not a low alcohol percentage, Christ.]
[She likely wouldn't have found much offense with that, except he slides in that diminutive and suddenly she's scowling. She's also not getting up, not least of which because she isn't sure she won't stumble.]
I'm not six bloody feet tall, of course you two can drink more than I can. And don't call me that. Rosie is one thing, that is quite another.
[He's standing, which means he's at the perfect height for her to just sort of kick him, right in the thigh, light enough to be teasing but hard enough to be felt.]
[ And he's in just the right mood to act wounded, clutching at his knee like she's stuck an arrow knife in it. He even pretends to lose his balance, dramatically collapsing to the floor.
[Delightful. Honestly, Rosalind looks entirely too smug at that, but you take your victories where you can get them. Besides: she's just tipsy enough that this is pretty funny, and she's laughing as she peers over the couch's edge.]
I hope you're not waiting for an apology, because you shan't get one. Poor thing, did I kick you too hard?
[ Also the floor actually feels really nice and cool against his cheek right now? God. And no he's seriously carrying this joke a little longer, not getting up just yet. ]
[Oh, well, that suits her just fine; it means she gets to stretch out on the couch, and does, lying parallel to him. What a pair they make, but on the other hand, there's a bit more dignity to a couch compared to a floor.
Idly, she pats his shoulder.]
Does that mean I can say whatever I want without you arguing?
no subject
[ Whoops, let him get another drink. ]
So, right - you used to be able to buy these fake police lights pretty easy. So I followed him until we hit a pretty shit neighborhood and pulled him over. You know nobody living around there is gonna do jack shit if they think cops are around. Pulled him over, dragged him out of the car, and bounced his head off the car door until he got more manageable. Stuck him in the trunk. You know, car trunks get so goddamn hot. Must have been miserable.
[ Now he glances over again, fingers lacing and unlacing. ]
More?
no subject
Not to mention the story itself is fairly awful. But it's also nothing she wasn't prepared for, and though she's got a tight grip on her glass, there's no hesitation in her nod.]
I'll tell you to stop if I need you to. Keep going.
no subject
[ He even shakes out his hand, as if shrugging off phantom pain. ]
And I strangled him. Took a while. You ever kill somebody, don't strangle 'em - you'll be there all goddamn day, and that's if you can even manage squeezing that tight in the first place. [ Another sip, another shrug. ] Threw his body in a cement mixer, kicked it on, and left. I'll let you imagine what a cement mixer does to a human body.
Like I said, it didn't make me feel any better. Kind of a huge waste of time, actually.
[ If he's sounding less and less remorseful as he goes on, he doesn't seem to notice. ]
no subject
But there's something just a little chilling about the fact that his voice has gone from understandable dullness to something far more casual. Huge waste of time, like he'd gone halfway across town to pick up a prescription instead of snuffed out a life and shoved the body into a cement mixer.
Absently, her fingers slide against her own neck.]
Well.
[Good lord.]
Is the murder itself the ammo, or the fact that it didn't help?
no subject
[ Shrug!! ]
Also, I told Ardyn. Figured you should know if we're all in on this little experiment thingadoo. Wouldn't want that little factoid popping up out of nowhere.
no subject
Mm, to say the least.
. . . I was going to evoke all that. I'm going to, I suppose.
[She drains her glass again, blinking hard as the alcohol hits her. She's not a particularly large woman and that's not a low alcohol percentage, Christ.]
In, in our experiment.
no subject
[ But he sees her hard blinking, so he stands, a little tipsy himself. ]
Got a guest bedroom if you wanna spend the night. No offense intended here, but buttercup, you can't knock 'em back like me and Tony do.
no subject
I'm not six bloody feet tall, of course you two can drink more than I can. And don't call me that. Rosie is one thing, that is quite another.
no subject
[ He has a million of them. And he's totally going to keep going if she doesn't interrupt him. ]
no subject
no subject
n arrowknife in it. He even pretends to lose his balance, dramatically collapsing to the floor.Yeah. ]
no subject
I hope you're not waiting for an apology, because you shan't get one. Poor thing, did I kick you too hard?
no subject
[ Also the floor actually feels really nice and cool against his cheek right now? God. And no he's seriously carrying this joke a little longer, not getting up just yet. ]
Yep. Still dead.
no subject
Idly, she pats his shoulder.]
Does that mean I can say whatever I want without you arguing?