( + ) chugging along! @rietsu
“There are no bad ideas.”
YOU’RE DRIVING AT THE speed of light. Hair flying haphazardly in the wind ( because you never liked helmets ), and you could of sworn you saw flashing blue and red lights in your rearview mirror but you’re much too engrossed in the adrenaline rush to fully process the thought– or care. It’s only when the blaring sirens reach your ears that you finally notice a figure of justice on your tail that you realize you done fucked up. AGAIN. But does that thought make you slow down or speed up?
“Only great ideas that go horribly wrong.”
Survival skills. That’s what she likes to call it. Others call it resisting arrest or even eluding the cops. But to each their own, right?
She relies heavily on her INSTINCTS. Nothing but adrenaline pumping in her veins. Life’s going much too fast for her mind to keep up–to carefully lay out decision after decision– so she relies purely on her instincts. They’ve had a few close calls, but when it comes down to it, they always manage to get her out of trouble. Somehow. Probably a MIRACLE. Though she doesn’t believe in those.
Anyway, she managed to escape from the cops. Hallelujah! Yet the tricky part is they’ve seen not only her face, but her scooter as well. And after about five seconds of contemplation ( with sirens still blaring throughout the streets ), Yerin decides to ditch her ride and save her hide. ‘Course, she was going to come back and pick it up eventually. She just didn’t expect to do so at a towing place. Where the building is already closed but the bike is not officially hers ( it belongs to her job! ), so what does she do?
“Shh,” she has a finger to her lips, while her other arm is snaked around Mi’s shoulder, palm resting flat against her mouth in order to keep any startling noises at bay. Their backs are pressed flat against the wall, shoulder-to-shoulder with their knees drawn to their chests. A beam of light shines through the window above their heads. Yet just as quickly as it came, it vanished and the room transferred back into darkness. The security guard is gone. “I think the coast is clear.”
Call it a lack of her own will, or an insatiable thirst for adventure, but Mi always seems to be getting tugged along into the antics of her friends---no matter how illegal or wild their ideas are (barring murder of course, which, thankfully has not been proposed). After all, it’s not as if the upholsterer hasn’t had her fair share of adrenaline rush-inducing borderline-illegal endeavors.
So when Yerin’s call lights up her phone screen at ten-p.m., it doesn’t take long for the two of them to assemble. Assembling entailing Mi rolling her butt off her sunken old couch, putting on decent clothing, and making Yerin send a photo of her signature to an agreement that she owes Mi a top notch carrot cake slice within the next week. That is, assuming they don’t perish in the night’s events. Breaking in is new to Mi, but she’s just been promised a slice of carrot cake and the coffee she’d downed four hours ago is still keeping her up, so she figures might as well. Besides, the experience might come in handy at a later time.
Eleven o’clock finds the two of them huddled up against a cold hard wall, doing their best to avoid detection, and Mi wondering if she’s gone a little too far this time. If she goes straight to jail, there’s no way she’s gonna get that carrot cake. Maybe they could make a detour on the way, or compromise and make a drive-thru run for---wait no, Mi---focus.
The plethora of broken down, stolen, illegal, and rogue motorbikes form a still and silent parade before them across the large room. Too big, too full of objects, too quiet. Silence is a terrifying thing, and it’s only the tapering down of hard breathing that keeps Mi’s imaginative paranoia from getting the best of her. Slowly, with a tiny jerk of her head, she allows herself to glance up at the now darkened window, where only the lights of passing cars dimly filter through for a moment---then nothing. Mi’s eyes train on Yerin’s face, then flicker over to the row of bikes and various small vehicles as she slowly creeps forward, crouching. “Do you see yours in there? Or are we gonna have to Accio Rin’s-bike-that’s-not-actually-hers?” Although barely audible, her whisper maintains a joking tone. Humor, after all, is one of the greatest shields she has in the face of anxiety.