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Chuck Shurley: that beardy dude with the laptop. ([info]capriciousgod) wrote in [info]wariscoming,
@ 2010-11-17 19:45:00

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Entry tags:chuck shurley, jo harvelle, kitty pryde/shadowcat

Who? Chuck and his Mystery Assailant Kitty (later: Jo, and open?)
What? DEATH. For Chuck, anyway.
Where? Outside Chitaqua's gates.
When? Today (actual action goes down at night).
Rating? Not horribly high, but, um, there's death, so it's not low, either.

Chuck had seen the way this day started. It had been years ago, but that didn’t mean he didn’t remember it - everything he’d seen in that vision was too vivid to forget, too important to push aside and ignore. So when he opened his eyes and immediately recognized what he was seeing as what he’d seen in his vision, like someone had taken a photograph and pasted it over his normal life, his heart sank - or, okay, it felt more like it shrivelled up and died inside him, because now it wasn’t just dying and leaving Jo behind, it was dying and leaving Jo and their child behind, and he didn’t know what would happen after that, and he was tempted to ignore the path set out in front of him and just bury himself in blankets and Jo, throw the day off-track a little bit, see if it changed anything.

But then his phone chirped like he knew it would, and he answered it and it was Dean, telling him to come down and give him a list of stock they had and what they could afford to trade for weapons... and he said he’d be right down, threw on a jacket and his shoes and scribbled a quick note for Jo - Duty calls, see you later, I love you - and left it on his side of their bed and took off, because if he hurried he could get back before she woke up, he could get back in bed and sleep through this day and it would never come true, it would all be fine.

Dean was in a mood, but what else was new? He did what he had to do, got in and out of there as fast as possible, but when he left it was with a list of things to gather together, which would leave gaps in their stock, and it felt weird to be following his vision so closely, felt weird enough that he stopped walking halfway to one of the sheds, just stood still for a few moments, waiting for time to keep moving without him, set him off-pace a little, and when he felt less like he couldn’t breathe from the deja vu he kept going, moved on and did his job.

Returning to the cabin wasn’t part of the vision. Neither was stopping to grab a handful of flowers (okay, they were pretty much just weeds, but they had big bright yellow blooms on them and they didn’t smell, like, bad or anything, so whatever) on the way back. He grabbed a mug, when he was inside, and put some water in the bottom, shoving the broken stems of the flowers inside and setting it on the counter table near the bed, so she could see them when she woke up, crumbling the note he’d left now that it didn’t matter, tossing it aside - and then he crawled back in under the covers, wrapped an arm around Jo’s waist and buried his face in her hair, and tried not to panic.

-

Things kept deviating from the vision, from there, to the point where he was almost sure it wasn’t going to happen. Maybe he was wrong, it wasn’t today. Maybe it was supposed to be, but he’d altered it. Maybe it would all be okay after all. It had to be, right? He had to be there for Jo - and for the baby.

Now he was sitting in one of the sheds that had been halfway converted into an office, of sorts (which basically meant here’s a desk for you because it still had no electricity, the only light coming in from the windows and the skylight above, and it was all rickety and smelled funny inside but this was where he worked, it was good enough for what he needed it for, anyway), head between his hands while he tried to figure out what to do next.

It was another fork in the road that was this day, another choice between following the vision and deviating from it, except the choice that was the better one was also the one that was supposed to drag him down the path to dying a horribly painful death tonight. He needed to go out and check the salt barrier around the camp, see if it needed to be patched, how much it would take, make an estimate and then coordinate the teams and the actual salt they’d need to get that done. It was important.

But it was also what was supposed to kill him.

He wasn’t sure what, exactly, was going to kill him, though. Because the vision had been his own point of view - dark, salt lines, hearing a sound and moving off towards it, and then death. So, basically, he had no idea what he was supposed to die from - but if he sent someone else out there to do what he needed to do, someone else might die. He wasn’t going to let that happen - he wasn’t exactly heroic, but he wasn’t a total jerk, either.

Ordinarily, he’d have just asked someone to come with him, if he was feeling spooked. Someone with enough gun skill to actually hit something that was coming after him, or something. But this was a vision, this was an almost guarantee that someone was going to die tonight, and he didn’t want to be the one responsible for that. So instead he sent a quick message to Dean (which turned into a slightly lengthy back-and-forth) and a quick message to Jo, and he grabbed the gun he kept in the desk drawer even though he hated it and wasn’t very good with it, and he headed out with his clipboard in hand to go do his job and hope that nothing in the dark was really going to kill him.


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[info]capriciousgod
2010-11-18 02:47 am UTC (link)
...what was that?

Chuck had made it only a little way around, flashlight beam on the ground where the thick white line of salt was (so far, no broken spots, though some places were getting a little thin, and he’d made notes on the clipboard he was carrying as to where those spots were and how much he thought he would need to fill those spaces in) when he heard the sound, and he froze, thumbing off the flashlight and taking a step backwards, so that he was standing inside the line of salt - not that that would do a whole lot of good if it was a Croat or something, but if it was a demon he’d be ...kinda safe, at least.

Except as he put his foot down, something underneath it crunched loudly - a broken branch or something, loud snapping that reverberated loudly through the air, and he panicked slightly, jumping and skittering away from it (images in his head of bones, dry bones that he’s standing on and breaking, maybe he’d seen too many horror movies before movies stopped being available, maybe he’d just seen too many images in his head, horrible images from his visions) and causing even more rustling and crackling to happen, and he was panicking now, because whatever that was out there was going to hear him and head right this way and he didn’t know if he was supposed to get his gun out and ready, or make a break for the gate.

...Gun. There was no way he could make it to the gate without making noise, and that was assuming he made it at all without the flashlight being on. He reached for his gun, and the flashlight slipped out of his hands, falling somewhere in the leaves with another muffled rustling sound.

Crap. Well now he was really screwed.

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[info]phasinghalfpint
2010-11-18 03:33 am UTC (link)
Kitty had to be ready for anything. She was out here alone and that meant that she had to watch her own back. She had to be ready for anything to happen. That was why all of her senses were peeled and ready to pick up on anything.

She heard the crunch. She recognized the crunch. Kitty knew it had to have been a footstep. Footsteps could mean trouble. Footsteps could mean that there was a Croat around. Footsteps could also mean an animal, but at the moment Kitty figured that it was more than likely a Croat. There were so many of them. They were dangerous and it was always best to not ask questions. In situations anymore it was best to shoot first and ask questions later. It was never a good idea to wait too long with a Croat.

Kitty reached, pulling her gun out automatically. She could hear everything. Every sound was blaring as if on stereo, every movement was vivid in Kitty's mind. There was another sound after the first, putting the small woman even further on edge. She started to move, walking forward, both hands holding her gun and ready to shoot. She could feel her heart thundering in her chest as she moved.

Then there was another sound. That had to seal it for Kitty. Something was there. Kitty looked around, carefully. Her brown eyes caught some movement and she felt something inside her click. Kitty had no freaking clue what she saw move. She knew that the world was dangerous, she knew that she had to stay safe, and she knew that her gun was loaded and ready. Her hands came up and she didn't hesitate. Kitty used her forefinger to squeeze the trigger. Sure she was only 5'2 and aiming level with her shoulders was low, but a shot at that level would still do damage to a Croat. Her gunshot rang out, reverberating through the silence. Kitty hated guns, she didn't like using them, but they were a necessary evil. The gun was going to keep her safe and that was what mattered. She didn't want to die.

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[info]capriciousgod
2010-11-18 03:51 am UTC (link)
As the flashlight disappeared into the blackness all around, Chuck lunged at it, which was probably what sealed his fate. Moving like that, it was stupid - there was a reason he wasn’t on patrols, why he kept to the inside of the camp and his ability to use guns was limited to target practice with fixed targets, and he wasn’t even any good at that. He got the flashlight, though, straightening victoriously, and then there was a gunshot.

For a second, he was confused. He didn’t shoot - he hadn’t even had his finger on the trigger, he’d only barely gotten his hand around it before he got sidetracked by the fallen flashlight - so where had that...

...and then the pain kicked in, it felt like something had slammed into his abdomen and from there lit him on fire except he didn’t think he was on fire because he didn’t see anything bright or firey, and who was that making that weird, pained keening sound, anyway?

Oh. That was probably him. Same as the wobbly “Oh God oh God oh God,” he was hearing now, right? That sounded like his voice. And this - the ground, the angle of the faint faint starlight, the hardness of his gun under him and the flashlight in his hand - this was all familiar. This was his vision. He was dying.

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[info]phasinghalfpint
2010-11-18 03:59 am UTC (link)
Kitty didn't put the gun away. She didn't even move from the position that she was in. She was ready to shoot again. Kitty was expecting some sort of reaction. She was expecting that she was going to hear something stumbling her way because the gunshot would draw attention. Kitty was expecting a lot of things, to be quite honest.

What she got was nowhere near what she had expected. It was a jolt through her entire body when she heard a sound that was obviously pain. Even more than that...she heard a voice just after that. Kitty felt panic flood through her. "Oh god...." She didn't even realize that she was saying exactly what she had just heard as she ran toward the sound.

It didn't take her but a moment to find the man. The man she'd shot. Oh god, she had shot a person. This was no Croat. "Oh no.... oh no.... shit..." Kitty stopped in her tracks, looking at the man. What was she supposed to do? Kitty didn't know what to do. She didn't know what she needed to do right now. She was standing there frozen.

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[info]capriciousgod
2010-11-18 04:11 am UTC (link)
For a second he was kind of confused, hearing an unfamiliar female voice join in his own litany of terrified and hurt words, and he trailed off, one hand pressed to where he could feel heat and wet (blood, his mind helpfully supplied, you’re bleeding. Because you were shot. That’s what happens, this is what it really feels like) leaking out, the warmth escaping and getting away in the cool air, and he felt sick and cold and terrified, oh God this was really it, wasn’t it?

There was someone standing over him. It was hard to see, and he waited a second but they didn’t move towards him anymore, or shoot him again, and he really didn’t want to die but he didn’t know what else to do. He fumbled for a second with the flashlight, one hand slick with blood and both of them shaking but he finally got it on, but he wasn’t exactly feeling strong enough to point it in any specific direction.

“I, this is, oh God... Jo?” It wasn’t Jo. He knew it wasn’t Jo. She’d said she was going to be in camp looking around, and the voice that had spoken wasn’t hers (he’d know hers anywhere, he loved the sound of her voice, and this wasn’t that), and he knew, logically, that she wasn’t here, and she was better off not being here, it was better, but...

...but he was dying, and he was scared, and he really wanted her here, to tell him it was all going to be fine.

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[info]phasinghalfpint
2010-11-18 04:18 am UTC (link)
Kitty couldn't believe that she had done this. She couldn't believe that this had happened. What had she done? She didn't know that he'd be okay. God, this guy looked extremely bad. There was no way that he was going to make it with a wound like that. There were so few doctors around anymore. there were so few people that were capable of taking care of small wounds now, let alone a gaping gunshot wound. Kitty felt so guilty.

Standing there looking down at the man, tears collected in the young woman's eyes, and she didn't even think, she couldn't think, as she dropped her gun on the ground and leaned down. She wasn't Jo, she sure as hell wasn't Jo. The name was familiar, but nothing was really coming to her at the moment. "No....I'm, I'm not Jo....God what did I do."

Her hands came up to her face and covered it, wiping at the tears that were streaming down without her thinking. Kitty couldn't stay here. Kitty couldn't go back to her own camp. What the hell was she going to do? Where was she going to go? She didn't know the answers to any of her questions. She couldn't stay here, though. "I'm...s-s-so sorry. I'm s-sorry...." Kitty said, her voice thick with guilt and sadness. She couldn't even think as she stood and took off running. Something inside of her had flipped a switch. She couldn't go back to camp. She had to hide. She had to get out of here. Her bag smacked against her back lightly as she ran, too afraid to look back at the horrible thing that she had done.

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[info]harvelle
2010-11-18 04:39 am UTC (link)
Rest? Chuck thought she should rest? She had way too much on her mind to even consider resting. No, instead Jo was doing as she said, wandering between the supply cabins and noting down anything they were low on. Jo couldn't help but think about other things, too, things they didn't have - namely, baby items. The thought of being pregnant, having a baby, had given her back what hope she thought she had lost over the recent years. This had to mean that they would win...even though Cas had said that god was gone, Jo couldn't believe that she would have to raise her child in this hell. They were going to win - soon - and things would be better after. With those thoughts in her mind, she started a second list, jotting it on the next page in the pad, intending on ripping it out and keeping it when she was done. It was a page with baby items, and thoughts about what she might need.

Crib - can make (John?)
Baby blanket - can get Mary to make?
Clothes - boy or girl?
Diapers
Toys
Shoes
Hats
Gloves


The more she wrote down, the sillier she knew she was getting. She also knew she shouldn't get her hopes up, because maybe when Martha showed up she'd tell her it was a fluke, a false alarm, and she wasn't really pregnant. But she could hope a little bit, right? She could dream. Imagine. Think about what the baby would be like, if he or she would have her eyes and Chuck's smile, if it would be as neurotic about pansies or show awesome knife-throwing skills.

Her thoughts broke off as she heard a sound - it wasn't thunder. No, this was a sound she was more than familiar with. It was commonplace, really, but not from the direction it came. It came from the North, and the target ranges were all to the Southeast. Chuck was in the North, checking the perimeter. The notepad fell from sudden limp fingers as the blond broke into a dead run, heading in the direction the sound had come from. She pulled her own handgun out of the back of her jeans as she moved through the darkness with ease, panic warring with the desire to be quiet enough to find out who had done whatever it was.

She saw the light out of sheer luck from the corner of her eye as she passed a tree. Had it been turned the other way, she might not have ever spotted it. Jo moved in the direction it shone from as she dug out her own flashlight out of a pocket, and held both out at arms length, the light under the gun so that she could see whatever she might have to shoot. Despite the flashlight, she almost tripped over something and shone the light downward. Her skin paled at the sight, and she lowered both light and gun as she dropped to her knees next to Chuck, checking him over.

"Chuck? God, what happe..." she trailed off as she felt something wet and sticky and familiar, and raised her hand. It was covered in blood. She quickly sought out the source of the blood and pressed hard as her eyes searched out his in the faint light from her flashlight. "Chuck, listen to me, answer me, okay? You're going to be okay, I promise. Just please, say something?" Her other hand, the one not covered in blood, rested on his cheek as she leaned in close. "Please, Chuck?"

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[info]capriciousgod
2010-11-18 04:51 am UTC (link)
Yup, not Jo. Just as he’d thought. He was kinda glad it wasn’t, even though he really wanted her there, because if it had been her she’d have been the one that shot him, right? And that just wouldn’t do, that would be so bad, she’d be so torn up about it, and... and he didn’t want that. He didn’t want her to find out, not ever, but there was nothing he could do about that, and now the girl - notJo - was running away, apologies in his ears and bouncing through his head, turning into his own because if he hadn’t come out, if no one had come out, she’d never have killed anyone.

He wasn’t sure how long it was after the girl left that he heard footsteps. He just knew he was getting colder and more sore, and there was bitter copper in the back of his throat. He shifted - making more of that horrible broken sound as he did - until he was on his side, curled in tight around his injury, spitting blood onto the leaves, and then there were footsteps and Jo was there, talking and touching him promising he’d be okay and he knew she was wrong, but it helped, anyway.

“’M sorry,” he managed, fingers of the hand around the flashlight letting go of it to reach up and curl weakly around her wrist where her hand was on his face, “I didn’t, I should’ve been more careful, I... Jo, it hurts,” he was trying not to panic, but the hazy feeling of pain and blood loss and shock was fading out and being replaced by fear. “It’s, I’m on fire, I, oh God I’m gonna die, aren’t I?”

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[info]harvelle
2010-11-18 05:18 am UTC (link)
Her eyes were filling with tears and she was glad it was dark enough that he couldn't see them, couldn't fully see her, because if he knew she was crying than he would know how bad it really was. Stubbornly, she shook her head. "It's not your fault. And no. You're not going to die." He couldn't, because they hadn't beaten Lucifer yet and they hadn't gotten married and she was carrying his child. "You're going to be just fine. I'm going to call for help and they'll come and we'll get you back to camp. You'll have a cool scar in a few weeks you can show off, okay?" Jo tried desperately to keep her fear out of her voice, because in reality she could feel how much blood he was losing around her hand despite her effort to keep the pressure on, and she knew that he wouldn't survive after losing so much, because they didn't have a real doctor and there was no way to give him a transfusion.

"You're going to be fine, Chuck, I promise." Her voice broke a little on the word, and she never noticed that the tears were starting to fall on his face. She let go of his cheek to fumble into her pocket for her phone. It slipped out of her fingers into the grass and she shook her head - it wouldn't do any good - and instead lay her hand on his cheek again.

"I know it hurts, baby, but you have to hold on, okay? Long enough for Dean to come with help," because she couldn't have been the only one who heard the gunshot. "You have to fight, okay, Chuck?"

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[info]capriciousgod
2010-11-18 05:48 am UTC (link)
It was his fault, though, she didn’t understand and he didn’t either, he didn’t get why he was supposed to die tonight, why now, why anyone had to be out here and dying tonight. God was mean, he decided, haze starting to creep back, He was mean because Chuck had done what he was supposed to do, he’d written everything down and he still got screwed over, he did everything they wanted him to do and when he finally was finished he didn’t even get a reward, just Croats and inventory and death before he got to marry Jo or meet his child. That just wasn’t fair.

“We should’a gotten married,” he blurted, coughed a little and tried not to be sick at the taste of blood, “I’d... it’d be better, we’d, I’d be able to find ... what if I can’t...” He wasn’t making any sense and he knew it. It was hard enough to talk, in the first place, when he hurt so bad and he was so close to panic (was she crying, or was it raining? Something wet was on his face, something that wasn’t blood) - and he didn’t know how to explain the sudden fear that came over him: what if he couldn’t find her in Heaven? If he even went there, if there even was a Heaven anymore, he didn’t know but... but he needed her to be with him, there, or it would suck, even if it was perfect. He didn’t know how to find her, or if she’d be able to find him. If they’d been married, he was sure they’d have been together there, but...

The thought disappeared just like it had arrived, and he watched her drop the phone with a sinking feeling that managed to come through despite the pain that was still slamming into him in waves. She was trying to be strong and reassuring, she wanted him to fight, but he’d never been good at fighting, didn’t she know that? She should have known that.

He wasn’t going to make it.

“I love you,” he started, tone still frantic, “I’m sorry, I didn’t want to leave you I just, I. I can’t, I’m not gonna make it, I know I’m.” Dying, you’re dying. This is how it really happens. It’s not glamorous, it’s not exciting, it’s not anything like you wrote it to be. There are no grand, deep revelations, it doesn’t feel like you’re floating. It’s sad, and it hurts, and it’s terrifying.

“Jo?” He clutched at her, bloodied hand and clean hand both, not thinking about getting his blood on her, not thinking about stains and the limited amount of clothing or detergent strong enough to get the blood out, just reaching out because he didn’t want to leave her but he didn’t know how to fight it anymore.

His grip went slack - lifeless and limp - a moment later.

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[info]harvelle
2010-11-18 06:01 am UTC (link)
"We will. We will tomorrow, tonight, I promise, just don't go anywhere, stay with me for me and the baby and please just fight, Chuck, please..." Her words were a whisper now as the tears fell more freely. He was hurting and she couldn't stop it and there was nothing she could do. She'd been too late and he was going to die and never know their child.

"I love you too, so much." She took a shaky breath to try and stop her tears while leaning in close to him, still desperately trying to stop the bleeding. But then his hands caught hers and pulled her in. "Jo?" "Here. I'm here, Chuck, and I'm not leaving you, I swear." When his grip loosened in hers, only seconds later, a sob escaped her, and her eyes closed. Taking a deep breath, she opened her eyes again to stare down at him.

Dead. Chuck was dead. Her tears dried on their own as her eyes cleared, shock setting in. Very carefully, she laid his hands across his chest, then leaned in and kissed him, tenderly. Scooping up her phone and gun, she left the flashlight where she lay as her face set into a carefully blank facade. Her eyes tore themselves away from him, and she began to slowly walk away, typing a message on the network with one hand as she did so.

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