Location: The Garage
Status: Closed ( @tierneysinclair)
Jack knows where Tierney works. The request on his credit check to rent the place had pinged Jack’s brain like a handful of Pop Rocks the moment it was submitted, and he’d seen the address as he’d pushed it into the digital equivalent of the ‘all clear’ pile. His first few days in Miami are packed with similar boring, routine work; deleting everyone’s Miami-to-Chicago paper trails, the flight records of the mutants who’d travelled by plane and the speeding ticket one dumbfuck had managed driving their way over. Once he’s done with that though, he finds himself wandering in the garage’s direction, and before he knows it he’s outside Tierney’s place.
Jack slips in the garage silently, hands in his pockets, casual as if he does this every day. As if they hadn’t both just moved across a country in an unprecedented and sudden life change.
The first thing he does inside is walk around the place, ignoring Tierney entirely. He can’t tell if it’s any better or worse than the last place since he knows fuck-all about garages, and isn’t one to hand out random compliments anyway, but he still inspects every corner, taking in the familiar and somehow comforting scent of oil and metal. As he moves he keeps an eye out for something small and shiny to pocket, keep his hands busy, but his first pass yields no results. It’s completely possible that the place is too new to be messy yet– from his experience Tierney always has some shit lying around, so it’s pretty disappointing.
When there’s nothing else to look at, Jack perches on a work stool by where Tierney is working, legs crossed and back a bit too straight. It’s closer than he’d normal get, just a few feet between them, but it’s been a while since he’s seen the guy so he does it anyway. Not that he’s missed him or anything, but this gives Jack a better view of what the hell Tierney’s doing. Motorcycles fascinate Jack– big, loud, fast machines, with flashy lights and glossy bodies. He’s always liked cars for the same reason, and motorcycles are basically cars stripped down to their most dangerous parts, so it’s a win-win.
After a while of watching Tierney working Jack forgets himself, leaning forward in his stool to peer into the machine’s innards. He narrows his eyes, focused almost to the point of hypnotized. “What’s wrong with this one?” His eyes run along the machine’s lines, sleek and dark. “It’s beautiful.”









