Loki arrives in Twinbrook in the heat
of summer, but it's humid and the air is still cold from the icy
spring. He's not excited and doesn't have any amazing plans, he just
wants to be left alone for a while.
Being a family man like he is this is
difficult; everyone he cares about is far away and he'll be lonelier
than he'd like to admit, but that's also the point. He's going to
find out what he's capable of on his own.
He uses his college fund to buy a
little place deep in the marsh, where he intends to work in solace
and reflection. The neighbors are half a mile away on all sides, and
he never needs to mow the lawn because nobody will be looking at it. That, and it's halfway underwater.
Growing up he'd always wanted a large
family, and he had fallen for Andrea completely. It was easy to imagine the future with her in it, especially when he didn't realize that people like her existed. His life had been orderly and easy to understand until she upended it and he'd found himself charmed and constantly surprised by her.
To find out that he
was naive and she just hadn't known how to reject him because they
were somehow 'such good friends' hurt. A lot. It was going to take time to
heal.
He spends weeks in the beginning just
getting to know the town but avoiding its people. There are also lots
of hot dogs to consume on his scant budget.
Twinbrook has all the charm of an old
story with brittle, unthreading pages and he quickly finds that he
does not miss the manic bustle of university or the charged tension
that surrounded him in his quaint hometown, castled in by mountains
on all sides as he had been.
Here there is activity; green, vibrant,
and heavy on the air. Everything around him is inescapably alive
instead of open and cold. It's the kind of place where a man can
become overtaken by the forest and the land without ever seeing
another one of his kind.
Just what Loki needs right now.
He did keep his communications
equipment and tunes it regularly, providing the occasional show to
the locals without really advertising. He's trying to see if he wants
to continue with radio, or focus solely on new projects.
He bought a workdesk with the last of
his savings to see if he could do more with his life as an inventor.
It was the question he had wanted to answer all along, it just had
taken him a bit of travel and self-reflection to find out. Who
invented the radio...?
(By the way ad revenue is a thing with
this item is that a possible job in this challenge? I completely
failed at it so maybe it's a moot point)
True bachelor living.
One evening he was out late collecting
scrap and happily alone in the quiet when Beverly Castor, one of the
locals, served herself a cup of hot cocoa and sat down nearby.
“What's a handsome young man like you
doing out at the scrapyard on a Friday night? Don't you have a nice
girl to get home to?”
Loki narrows his eyes and sullenly
takes a sip of his coffee. “There's no one.” He finally says.
“A bad breakup?” She asks and
laughs lightly, it's a musical sound. When Loki doesn't respond
immediately she shrugs. "Not to be nosy, but it seems obvious by your reaction. Not that you need to be concerned about me dear, I'm happily tied down already and you will not be able to sway me in your direction!"
“And I'm not going to get all
flustered like I'm sure all the girls your age do, not matter how
good-looking you are.”
Loki is amused despite himself. For an
older woman she was kind of adorable. What was she doing out at the
scrapyard, in her homey housewife apron and dress?
She notices that he's staring now. “So,
you seem to be out here working on a project. And it's late, which makes you ambitious. What are you doing wasting his time in a little sleepy town like
Twinbrook? I hope you're not just running away from something.”
He frowns. “Maybe I am."
"From your girl?" She guesses in a knowing tone.
He huffs out a short breath. "I think I'm
done with women for a while.” It's not a difficult thing to admit; he'd spent hours on the road and months traveling, thinking about it, followed by more time living here, mulling it over as he worked.
“Well not all women are the same,
dear.” She says with a coy smile. “You're young, if the lady
you're having trouble with is young too it's probably just a matter
of experience.”
Loki scoffs into his coffee. “Yes,
the experience of realizing I meant nothing to her.” He leaves the
rest of his thoughts unsaid. He didn't want to talk about this.
“Then it sounds like she was either
blind or a complete idiot.” The blond, slightly graying woman comments. “If I wasn't so
much older than you, and married, I'd chase you all over this town
until you couldn't refuse me anymore.”
There was a hint of indifference in her
voice that made Loki laugh in spite of himself. Something about this
situation was quickly becoming amusing. “So you're husband doesn't
mind that you run all over town doing whatever you want at any time
of night? Uh... Mrs-”
“Castor. Call me Beverly.”
“Beverly. I'm Loki Beaker.” He
replied.
“Loki. That's a very dangerous
sounding name.”
He shrugged. “I'm named after some
great uncle on my father's side who died without having any children.
I'm pretty sure my name was a bid for his inheritance which is ironic
as my family received none of it.”
“Name of the trickster god.” She
shook her head and chided, jokingly. “Already trouble from the
minute you were born.”
“I guess I was.” He gave in
good-naturedly. “So what brings you out here Beverly? Other than
hunting for impressionable young men to make your husband jealous
with?”
She waived her hand dismissively at the
veiled accusation. “Please. He's a complete coward and he trusts me
implicitly. If there was anyone I wanted more than him he wouldn't
stand in my way.”
Loki looked away for a second, put off
by her comments. Were all women this casual in their relationships?
“You don't have to look so disgusted
when it's all true.” She continues. “But don't worry I'd never
cheat on him, that would be like saying that I wanted to waste the
last twenty five years we've had together, building our life here.
And that's a part of having a strong relationship: we accept each
other's faults. He knows that I have a sharp tongue sometimes and I
know that he has no balls. That just means that I have to work a
little bit more to make sure I don't upset him. If I love him I owe
him that.”
Loki watched her sip her cocoa for a
few moments, intrigued. “You know something Beverly? I think I'm
glad we met. I wouldn't mind talking with you again sometime.”
She nodded. “In a strictly platonic
way. You heart-breaker.”
“I'm not a-”
“All men are.” She interrupted him.
“And if you like chess I could use someone to play with sometime.”
“Sure.” He agreed with a small
smile. Twinbrook wasn't a bad place at all so far.
So Loki is able to settle in without
too much difficulty. He works late into the evenings and sometimes
all night and calls his family to keep up during the daytime.
He does make small inventions and sell
them at the local consignment shop and has taken up a hobby in
photography.
DeAndre Wolfe, local musician, is well
known around here. Even Loki has heard of him.
So he gets an interview in while
they're both at the store.
Beverly occasionally meets him at the
park and they talk about people in town, local gossip and she
generally makes him feel as if he's not a total recluse.
They meet for chess once or twice a
month, and Loki learns a lot from her.
“Do you think she likes him?” She
asks of Dudley Racket and Sophia Carlton, who were flirting behind
them. The day was supposed to be a game of chess but became a lesson.
Loki shrugs. “Hard to say. She's
acting like she does.”
“Good choice of words. Acting.
There's a few things most men don't take into account when a woman is
openly flirtatious. What is it that you think she finds attractive
about him?”
“His... persistence.” He decides.
“Hmm, possibly. But more likely than
that is that she likes the way he makes her feel, which may not mean
she'll want to be with him seriously.”
“So you mean there could also be a
self-esteem issue.”
Beverly nods. “You catch on quick.
People are complicated, and usually when they meet someone and are
solely flirtatious without getting to know each other there is
something they need from the interaction. They aren't looking to give
anything. Do you get my meaning?”
He nearly did. “I feel like I'm
starting to. You mean it's not genuine?”
“It might not be. I'm merely saying
that after that excitement wears off in the beginning, what will
these two have left?”
Loki looks over her shoulder, trying
not to be too obvious about it. “A questionable taste in tattoos
and and an obnoxious broom of a mustache?”
The woman across from him smiles.
“Something like that. If they have things in common that will help
them stay together, but if they only got together because there was
something they needed and they don't really enjoy each other's
company...”
“Then it's doomed to fail.” Loki
sighs, this conversation is starting to hit close to home. “If they
never really got to know each other...” But it wasn't the same. He
and Andrea got along well together, they both worked hard and she was
quirky and fun when he was too serious, but he'd always taken those
things to be complimentary. He'd liked her personality, so what went
wrong?
The couple continue on their date, and
Loki mulls over the problem foremost on his mind. “Do you think,
between my ex and I, that I just didn't know enough about her?
Everything seemed so perfect.”
Beverly shakes her head. “I'm not
sure, it could have been anything. Like I said you're young and for
all you know she regrets her mistakes too.”
That was as far as Loki was able to
understand things for today, so he thanked Bev for the game and said
he was going to head back home to work. He had understood Andrea, so
what was the point of all this?
Just before their game ended though
Jeni Jones-Brown stumbled over, apparently drunk. “D'you guise have
th' time, mm totally los' my watch?” She slurrs.
Seeing that they were engrossed in
their game she peered over at them, and released a hot, alcoholic
breath into Loki's face. “Why're you put'n the rook there, make him
go sideways over...” And she pushed her finger into one of Loki's
chess pieces.
“Can you watch what you're doing?”
He snapped and she swayed backwards in offense.
“Don't hav t'be mean abou'
it...”
He sighs again as Beverly smirks.
“Checkmate. You shouldn't have let yourself get distracted.”
Loki gives her a little bow and his
phone rings while Jeni stumbles away murmuring to herself.
DeAndre and he get along well, so it's
starting to feel like he's making friends in this town. Loki wonders
how long he's going to be in Twinbrook but for now he's not going to
overthink anything.
He gets off the phone and turns on his
heel to go back home and nearly walks into a bouquet of flowers.
Jeni Jones-brown, tottering towards
him. “Less hang out,” She says with careful enunciation as
if she knows how inebriated she is right now. “I'm sorry about the
ga-game.”
Beverly left a little while ago or she
would be laughing about this, he's sure of it.
“No, thank you.” He says tersely.
“I juss wanna cuddle.” She
pouts.
He backs up a step, she looks like
she's getting way too close to simply jumping on him. “I don't want
to be someone's regretful hookup.” He tells her. “So no offense,
but no thanks.”
“I'm not drunkh, I'm tryn'a get
laid.” She says slurringly.
Loki remembers his last night at Uni
nearly half a year ago now with Mika and shakes his head. He had been
hungover and out of his mind and he'd made a mistake. “I'm not even
flattered because you won't remember this in the morning.” He tells
Jeni softly, almost to himself. “And... I don't want to help you
cheat on your boyfriend, or whatever.”
So she does the most logical drunken thing and leans in to kiss him.
“Leave me alone you batshit crazy
girl!” He finally yells. Why were all the women his age so
infuriating?
“Juss make a blond baby wi'
me!” She yells after him as he makes his retreat home.
Things are rocky in the beginning as
they would be anywhere, but after the incident Loki goes to the park
less and less. He calls friends from home, works on his inventions,
and largely just keep to himself.
Eventually he gets up the courage and
invites over someone he both cares a lot about, and is terrified of
disappointing. His mother, Gundrund.
It's been a long time, and her few gray
hairs have become many. As expected, she quizzes him on academics
immediately. He gets his ambition from her so it's no surprise when
she opens with “I just don't want you to settle in here,” even
though he clearly has. “When are you going back to finish your
degree?”
“I- I'm doing well as an inventor,
it's something I can excel at. I'm still maintaining the radio station
I started back in college, I have a license for it and everything.”
She frowns, unimpressed.
“Where's your girlfriend? What happened to Andrea? You don't talk about her anymore.” Her eyes are narrowed, expectantly.
Wistfully he looks away. He has no idea
how to answer that without betraying the depth of his emotion to her,
but Gundrund is a very shrewd woman and she knows her son well. His
silence says everything.
“I was... overconfident.” He says
after a minute.
She nods, eyebrows raised. “And if I
told you she ran off to Starlight Shores and is living with her
cousin?”
He turns his head back to look at her
blankly.
“So you did know,” she says
approvingly. “Well my son is not a weakling, nor a failure. Spend
some time out here earning an income, making a name for yourself and
then go get her.” She advised. “Women love a man who is
persistent.”
His mind goes back to Jeni from the
other night. He's not so sure. “It won't be that easy,” He admits
with some difficulty. “She just didn't feel the same way as I do.
Did.” He amended.
She folds her arms across her chest,
smiling softly. “Then make a pile of money and shove it in her face
so she knows what kind of mistake she made in letting you get away.”
Loki laughs a bit. “Thanks. I think I
needed to hear that.” He says it mostly for her benefit though, he
knows her health hasn't been great lately and he wants her to feel
like she's helping him. In truth he can't think about anything like
seeing Andrea without feeling empty.
His father recently passed away at a
young age and it's taken a toll on his mother especially. He wants
her to remember him as strong, unfazed, no matter what the truth is.
“Now I want to see all this crap
you've been making instead of earning your degree.”
He already has a rotational pull all
wrapped up and ready to give her.
“It's an educational toy.” He says
uncertainly.
“It's lovely.” She says without
opening it, then her voice becomes stern. “And I'm still expecting
grand kids, whether Andrea comes back or not. Now, what have you got
around here to drink?”
He cracks open a bottle of blended
Cherimola Blan & Cranerlet Nuala he'd bought the day before at
the consignment shop. “One of the local nectaries makes this, it's
called First Crush, it's seasonal-”
“Whatever it's called it's not
showing up fast enough.” She quips curtly, heading outside to sit
down. It had been a long flight and she was not about to pay the
asking price for a two ounce bottle at 10,000 feet in the air where
there were plenty of spirits to be imbibed on the ground.
“Sure, ma.” He says, setting the
glasses outside and sitting with her.
She spent some time reading the novel
she'd brought with her and wasn't up for too much in the way of
conversation, but there was something much more precious and
intangible she'd injected into his little shack with her visit: the
feeling of belonging again.
He doesn't normally have anything to
drink, losing control of himself in college once was enough, but
today feels like a special occasion.
Gundrund stays for the weekend, they
make the most of their time together and catch up on family and town
gossip from Aurora Skies (Loki doesn't care for the gossip all that
much but he can play along for his mom's sake)
She even gets him a makeover (but he
refuses to cut his hair).
She gets one too. Is this really the
current style? The stylist insists: bricks are in.
They head out to the summer festival on
the last night.
“I'm very glad you came to visit.”
He says before they have to head back to the airport.
“That's right you are,” she
responds easily. “Can't even visit his own mother....”
“I'm sorry.”
“Don't be sorry, pick up the pieces.
I know you think you have a good thing going here, but you had a good
thing with Andrea.” She reminds him yet again. “So like I told
you when I first got here, once you are able to save more money-”
“I'm not planning on making her get
back together with me.” Loki interrupts briskly.
“I just don't want you to end up
alone, like I am now.” She says in a quiet, somewhat fragile voice.
It breaks his heart a little, but Loki smiles thankfully at his mother.
“I'm glad you came, and thank you for encouraging me. If it will
make you feel better, I'll go visit them sometime, will that be
alright?”
Gundrund smiles and gives him an
uncharacteristically casual thumbs-up.
She flies home that evening and it
turns out to be the last time they ever speak in person. But for now, it's a comforting memory.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ah yes, the story of unsolicited advice. You ever notice IRL how many people come straight out of the WOODWORK to 'help' you when you're going through something that their advice might have helped you prevent earlier? The only advice I've ever gotten is that 'hindsight is 20/20 bullcrap and I'm plenty capable of beating myself up for mistakes on my own LOL. Poor Loki (I'ma say that a lot)
So this Twinbrook is NOT the one Andrea/ Meghan grew up in, strictly because I didn't realize that she was from Riverview all along! The marshy place her dad had is actually in Riverview, which I discovered when I tried to see it as Loki lives here now. I'll probably keep the old posts the way they are written, even if Twinbrook is technically wrong for her.
Also when characters say things like 'All men are heartbreakers' and make generalizations, or when Loki 'accused' Dustin of being gay, I'm not saying I as the creator feel any particular way about those subjects. I want to make my characters as believable as possible and I can't go around having everyone with the same opinions etc, because it would be ignoring things people sometimes say in real life and possibly become a more boring story. Just in case it's helpful for anyone to know that. :3 So if, in some future post some sim is on drugs or hates their kids, or has a generally bad attitude, well that might be there so all the good attitudes stand out a little bit better. Nobody's complained or anything, it's just in case.
Thanks for reading!
-The Frog
What a sweet old lady Beverly is. Loki needed a friend like her. And that conversation with his mother...I take it we haven't seen the last of him in Dustin/Meghan's story?
ReplyDeleteYeah didja notice that the girls his own age are now annoying instead of 'women in general'? So he's coming along.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes we will see him again in the Sparrow legacy.
Snarky elderly ladies make my life better so I thought, why wouldn't one be able to help Loki? XD
Actually they just casually met when she sat down and started talking to him, so it was pretty much exactly like I wrote it.
It was weird that he rejected Jeni actually, he was way beyond mourning for Meghan by this time, so I'm guessing he just has really high standards now...
Tbh I still think Loki has a lot of growing up to do, but I'm glad that he moved to Twinbrook because being on his own seems to be good for him. And I totally didn't know that broadcasting could make money! I have used the radio before, but only while at uni.
ReplyDeleteI think the main problem is that Loki still thinks that he understood Andrea/Meghan, even though he never asked her about her past or her dreams for the future. He seems to think that surface level was enough for a deeper relationship.
I think Loki's mom is giving him terrible advice to keep pursuing Meghan. Sure, women do like when men are persistent, but not when they've already said no and broken up with you. I can see where she's coming from, but it's not fair to push her own fears onto him. I do hope Loki tries to form a friendship with Meghan again without expecting anything more.
Loki's just not that emotionally mature. He could become that way, but since he's not looking inward as to what went wrong, it's anybody's guess if he really learned from the experience or not.
DeleteA part of me hopes that Loki takes so one's advice, but being that he puts a high regard on family connections, he won't be able to stay away from the influences of them really.
The 'run advertising' netted Loki 17 or 16 simoleans after trying it a few times.
Loki needs to find out the Meghan keeps rejecting Dustin. Maybe that'll make him feel better. XD
ReplyDeleteOh gosh. Beverly needs to stop flirting because it is making me nervous.
Ugh I'm not sure I like Gundrund's advice. My personal advice would be "get over it you hoser!" But I'm glad Loki realizes it isn't good advice.
I know can you imagine if she pulled that sh*t with Loki?! :O
DeleteHe'd be all... 'Ima force kiss you to shut you up!' every time. (because I have no idea how I'd write that, it's probably be a deal-breaker for him and he'd just yell at her)
Glad you caught onto that. Beverly totally flirts with him, but in the end they have a platonic relationship ...ish? She asks him on dates but nothing happens on them. So I figured she's a cheeky older broad.
I based her advice on her ambitious trait and the fact that she doesn't see her son a lot. A bird in the hand...
I laughed way too hard at Loki's interactions with Jeni Jones-Brown. What a crazy drunk! I hope Loki continues to grow before finding Meghan and Dustin again.
ReplyDeleteHis house brings back memories. It's where I started my legacy. <3
Yeah he's a weirdo but I'm sure he'll get better over time. Jeni was hilarious, I was sad she didn't show up again.
Delete