Today I started reading your story, I must say that with so many chapters I hesitated for a few days (pure laziness). I'm glad I decided to do it, I read the first five chapters and I'm totally hooked.
Your founder is adorable in a strange way, both physically and psychically. I like her sarcastic way of seeing life.
Excellent story, very well written and with good pictures.
Thanks! I hope you enjoy the voyage, and be glad that you caught me at generation four instead of even later.
Aww how wonderful, Trip! That's an excellent reason to be distracted.
Maybe I'm a baddie, but I didn't see Jo all that unsympathetically in this update. She doesn't want commitment, she was going to have to deal with it sometime, and Agnes did it for her. I don't much care for this Katherine though.
I had mixed feelings on Jo's actions. I actually wanted her and Agnes to stay together a little longer, but I guess I play up traits a lot. And I have to control anywhere from five to eight or more sims at a time without Aggie in the picture. Always good to pare down!
As for Katherine, she was awful. The game specifically designed her to be.
Falling in love is a great distraction
We finally find out who Jo was mourning for in the beginning, I was wondering how long it would take. Also, I don't know if this was your intention or not but I loved the bare walls and the glass decor giving off Katherine's coldness.
I wasn't even thinking of the setting reflecting her personality. When I set up places in other realms, I use black for the afterlife, demonic realms, and whatnot, while I do the inverse for the mind. But I like your interpretation too.
I second what Rosa said.
Plus falling in love is the best reason for delays.
That it is! I'm much happier than I've been in a while. Except for the fact that school isn't helping me with updating more than once a week either.
Yay, go Trip! I'm so happy for you . Falling in love is the best.
It's a shame about poor Agnes, though. Oh well. I'm interested to see what this Kath is like.
That it is! At least right now it is. It feels a lot better than my last relationship, which was seven special layers of awful.
Interested as you might be, I have a lot of material to cover first.
Chapter 88: Shrapnel Snow
Twinbrook started getting colder. Lily threw on a tangerine-colored pleather jacket and distressed jeans in faded black to feel young again, though getting the affections of the old men of the town wasn’t on her mind. Nor was it on theirs. Her face and charcoal-colored hair and retirement payments told a deeper story, after all.
Her heart was mended and wrapped in tape, which made it work well enough to get on with life and as painless as if she had a glass of water and two percocets. She was able to last for her first few years of life without knowing Bronson, after all, and she survived those first years without adult fun and vices to replace him. Now an old hag like the other two immortals, Lily indulged in drinks with her grandma, art museum trips with her father, and her usual hobbies.
It took forever, but she redid the wallpaper, until she realized that her eye for patterns became limited. As much as being able to scare Hephaestus in the morning with her unintentional camouflage would have been cool, she looked into a new pattern. But not before sculpting. The room filled up with ice sculptures each day. Hephaestus gave up trying to sculpt in his off-time from technical work for the theatre, though it gave him more time to work his way up from a roadie to an official stagehand.
Those parts were fine. Snow fell over the town, as it usually did after Spooky Day. Everyone else was out, and Lily demanded they stay out late so she could enjoy a night alone, or as alone as she could be with a bottle of cheap nectar.
She wouldn’t have minded it if Tegan was in that night, though. Her lime-tinted sunshine made for good company, with kind words and news about her job and inventions always on her tongue. However, even Tegan had things she prioritized more than her mother that night. Lily would cope. She needed to let her grown-up daughter have her space, no matter what heartbreaking things she could do with it.
The front door opened, still creaking on its hinges because no one bothered to oil them. Lily prepared to hide her nectar from Annette, assuming that the dinner rush was shorter than usual that night. When all she saw was blue and green and her lovely Tegan instead, Lily put her bottle on the counter in plain sight and greeted her with a hug.
“Have a good night, peapod?” Lily asked her.
Tegan dumped a pile of tickets she was issued on to the table instead. Lily took a swig of nectar just to have the courage to process it.
“You certainly weren’t crashing any of the cars,” Lily said. “I taught you too well.”
“It is a little crappy,” said Tegan. “But I messed up a lot. And got this.” She put another slip on top of the already-large pile of tickets.
Distruption of peace, repeated.
Community Service: 30 Days
Signed, Christopher Greenwood. County Sheriff.“To think I was his friend,” Lily snarled. “I voted for him and this is how he thanks me! What could you possibly disturb?”
“You know the fishing hole I bought last year?”
“Yeah. Does anyone live near it?”
“Apparently.”
As autumn graced Twinbrook with its golden glow and the smell of burning leaves and allspice to flavor pies and lattes to counter whatever could be rotting in the bog, Tegan did her thing. As vague as it could be for some, Tegan’s things were fixed. She worked, she invented, she went on a few lukewarm dates with Bryant and still stayed by his side because the “holding doors open for m’lady” hadn’t worn on her yet.
But that was all through the eyes of those close to Tegan. Only she was the closest to herself, and to her, life went on a good course. However, she tired of digging bits of trash out from underneath her fingernails, of brushing dirt and residue of beyond-rotten food from her knees, and generally of digging through garbage while still dressed in bows and high-heels decorated with bows. There had to be an easier way to get scrap.
On a particular autumn day, the morning rainclouds started to clear, and Twinbrook lit up. A rainbow spanned the sky. The citizens gained 50% more happiness as Twinbrook let up its hazy, dreary cloud cover for once, and made for a beautiful early afternoon.
Alas, Twinbrook was nothing without its own Waverlys causing mayhem.
Tegan never set out to be one of those mayhem-causing Waverlys, not even for the sake of saving her from nighttime dumpster-diving. But she considered her options, and the best one turned out to be violent and bright. She could do it at home, until it turned out that the backyard had little space for two rows of defunct fridges. Then she turned to the law, with Twinbrook’s laws concerning such destruction being a different way to say “do what thou wilt (to what you own, that is).” She looked towards real-estate instead, which was normal for a young Waverly to do. Where else would they get their riches? Not from fishing holes, but that didn’t stop Tegan from buying Elkhorn Fishing Hole.
“Changing interests, so late in the game?” Annette asked, when Tegan set the deed to the pond in front of her. “I know we’re rich, but wouldn’t you go for something more…useful? Profitable? It’s not a smart choice.”
“It’s smart for me. I’d rather not burn down someone else’s place, you know?”
“Okay. Talk to me about a real investment when you find one. And, burn down? Crap, peapod, what’s gotten into you?”
She would learn. With plastic explosives in hand, Tegan strapped them to one fridge that was chained to many fridges. Instead of filling up a landfill with them, various fridge disposal people were more than happy to let Tegan give them a new life and a beautiful, fiery end. She set a timer that ticked each second, and she ran to a safe distance away as the second ticked away. Soon, that trash would become treasure, in a way that benefitted both her and the lowly garbage workers.
Most of Twinbrook expected Tegan, the dainty, ribboned princess, to look away and not indulge in the sights of wanton destruction.
Fools! She looked on with wide-eyed glee, awaiting the glow of her carnage.
The blast delivered. It also delivered a hefty fine due to a noise complaint from the Nguyen family down the road, but Tegan paid that and sent the Nguyens an apology card and a few fine chocolates as well. If she was feeling normal, she would have stopped it there, but the rush from blowing up old appliances needed to be replicated.
So she did it again, with fines racking up each time.
She held true to doing it only on property owned by the family. Franco gave her clearance to blow up some old cars at the Grey Chiffon Lounge, as long as it was before happy hour there.
Light engulfed the whole lot and shrapnel broke some of the windows, but the family had to replace enough of them thanks to hoodlums with rocks to throw, even without Tegan blowing up whole automobiles. They weren’t angry. But the bartenders were and they goaded Franco and the law enforcement with another formal complaint against Tegan.
It sucked, because her new contraption, the
Tessa 1.0.0.6, sucked even more and collected the scrap metal too until the parking lot was free of trash, if scuffed-up from a C-4 explosion. However, the employees were adamant that she was being a nuisance.
So on a normal day, she would listen to them too. But she kept at her detonation spree for a few weeks, accepting the fines as a cost of her new hobby. And the whole town was confused that one of the biggest charitable contributors in Twinbrook would blow up the whole town and use it being her property as an excuse. Her Racket ancestry was diluted by a few generations, which wasn’t enough to justify that. It came to a head that night, which made Tegan get her head back, and some guilt too.
“I’m so sorry, mum,” Tegan said, nearly crying.
“I’m not saying you were wrong,” Lily said. “But I guess I have to wonder why.”
“I wish I knew,” Tegan whispered, sounding choked. “I never meant to bother them. I need to make it up to them.”
“Do you know where you’re volunteering?”
“Enrichment for Senior Citizens, starting tomorrow.”
“I know that Janelle is always there and I need to catch up with her. I’ll help you with it.” She gave Tegan a long hug, wishing she could slap some sense into old Chris about the punishment. Tegan went upstairs, reportedly to go to bed, while Lily had a bottle of nectar to finish up.
While her mother engaged in the family’s favorite pastime, Tegan lay on her back, looking up at the design on the canopy of her bed. As she undressed and slipped into the sexy underwear and garters ensemble that was somehow more comfortable to sleep in, a ring fell from inside of her shirt. She still forgot that she kept it, a simple gold band with her birthstone in the center, stuffed inside of her bra rather than on one of her fingers.
It fit on her fingers without wiggle room or squeezing. However, it was always cold against her skin, even pressed up against her chest all day. Blowing up all of the old fridges in South Simnation wasn’t going to heat it up either.
It was just a piece of jewelry, after all, and a little ring couldn’t put a dent in the good things in her life, even if it was shot out of a cannon.
For one, well, Piper was still being cute, and Tegan came home each day from detonating junk cars to Hephaestus’ cloned little darling playing in the living room. Each day, the wriggly little toddler got cuter and cuter, building upon what started as a near-infinite source of cuteness.
That was the least hyperbolic description I could get from Tegan about little Piper, by the way.
Whatever, I don’t blame her, because even this narrator thinks that Piper was the cutest toddler in the household, even if all we had in my time were photos and an eyewitness account. However, her Goode genes were not enough to trump her evil doll-biting tendencies.
Or to stop her from being a fussy little worm, but Tegan said that she still thought that a fussy Piper was cuter than the second-cutest toddler in the world at their happiest.
But gushing over Piper alone didn’t hold up to what Tegan could say about her and an adult teaching her how to talk.
Especially about the particular adult that taught Piper how to talk.
As painful as it was, Tegan did her best to try and consider Hephaestus as nothing more than a friend and a budding guitarist who made her long sessions at the work bench vibrant and musical. Some of her friends dropped hints that she would be better off with him, but she wasn’t going to be a cheater. That was reserved for those evil Rackets (even though she trusted Annette that grandpa Bill was the best cheating jerk she could marry). And she wasn’t going to be promiscuous, as that was reserved for ladies with no self-respect (according to Bryant), for old men like grandpa Franco (according to himself), or for other Rackets like uncle Shark (according to everyone, and to Shark too if he was alive). So she held off on it and grit her fangs, putting on a smile.
Forgetting that pain, Tegan made huge strides at work. Her boss kept her late for a training session, as Twinbrook’s problems with full-fledged, human ghosts grew, and the rest of the trained hunters went on to better gigs in Moonlight Falls and elsewhere.
“Yes, you can actually bargain with them, Pollyanna,” her boss said. “I knew that it would bother you otherwise.”
Her first job was at none other than 19 Poker Flats Drive, at the end of the road. Bryant’s house. Seeing him could help her make up her mind, after all. She decided that was the night to make a decision.
“It’s…it has to be from the master bedroom,” Bryant said, shaking, as soon as she got to the front door. She took out a scanner.
“This will find it,” she said. “It better.”
It didn’t. She scanned the whole room without a single ghost coming out of the literal woodwork, and nothing haunted the carpets either.
“Alright, maybe it was the kitchen,” Bryant said. “I mean, it’s right below the master bedroom, right?” He wasn’t wrong.
He wasn’t wrong about the kitchen either, as a few seconds of sound waves roused a silver, opaque spirit, who was haunting the fridge in hopes of getting some yoghurt or Mountain Dew. Her body was draped in a medieval gown, and Tegan learned that night that Twinbrook was far older than she thought.
“Can I help you?” she asked the spirit, who turned towards her.
“It’s that sister of mine!
Her line ended up ruling the Kingdom of the Two Streams.”
“Maybe it’s time to reconcile. Is she here?”
“Probably under the foundation. Shake your blasted technology some more.” Tegan honestly didn’t mind the scanner, but maybe that ghost had a point. Regardless, she walked in laps around the hallway until something blue rose from under her feet. A blue ghost, dressed the same, covered her ears.
“Oh, it’s one of those guys again,” the spirit grumbled. She spotted Tegan in her uniform and prepared some choice words.
“How about you guys stop meddling with our world, huh?” She was screaming at the poor ghost hunter, who thought that her job was about helping them. And darn it, she would make it about helping them.
“When did you guys pass away?” she asked the blue one. Both of them jumped off the mortal coil in the 17th century, while Tegan lived in the 22nd. Meanwhile, Bryant acted disgusted at the ghosts, but at least they were being dealt with.
“Man, the things I’ll do if you can get rid of them,” he muttered.
“Well, it’s been about 500 years, hasn’t it? Why haven’t you dropped the feud?” Tegan asked.
The grey one chimed in. “She was given the land north of the delta. Surely, someone from her family owns it, while mine has a little cabin in the bogs at most.”
“Actually, your kind don’t own any of it. That’s mostly my family’s property now.” Tegan turned as red as a lime-green woman could, which is to say, not much. However, the ghosts noticed that she was flustered in many ways, guilty of being in a family of new money and newer real estate.
“That…that might settle a lot, actually,” the grey ghost said. “You’re as powerless as I am.”
“I don’t even have the king of Veronaville anymore,” said the blue one. “He cheated on me with some peasant wench from the Oasis.”
They were silent for a moment.
“Let’s settle this without the green one.” The two sisters shook hands and dissolved into the aether, hopefully never to bug Bryant or the neighbors again.
“Bizarre,” he said. “You did it!”
“I did.” Tegan was in awe at the quiet, empty house.
“I love you, you know?” Bryant said.
“I guess I didn’t.”
“I’ll repay you somehow.” They left with a quick kiss, as Twinbrook had more than enough hauntings to keep the newest ghostbuster busy all night, and Bryant needed some sleep now that his house was spirit-free.
But as well as that night ended, perhaps she made a mistake, a few days before getting her community service sentence.
As Twinbrook shined in bright white, the park in the center of town continued its festival, serving hot chocolate and snowball fights to Twinbrook citizens of all ages. For the young at heart, it also made for an excellent date. Tegan’s heart still looked in wonder at the falling snow. And in it, her heart saw snow angels, snowballs, snowmen, and things most sims left behind at a younger age. But she didn’t dress for the weather to stiffly stand around with a hot latte and a date.
However, her date turned out to not be too bad either. Bryant turned out to be sweet that afternoon. He bought the latte for her, and eagerly agreed to a snowball fight.
“Really?” she asked. “That’s so sweet of you.”
“I’ve been a bad gentleman to m’lady. Chivalry shouldn’t be dead.” And heck, she could afford the latte better than he could. Bryant wouldn’t let her win at the snowball fight, though. Not that it mattered, because it just meant that she could practice with the elders more to improve and beat him next time.
They shared a kiss in the falling snow, covered in even more snow from their friendly battle.
“You always surprise me, Bry,” Tegan said.
“Now you need to do the same to me.” He ran off to either get the snow off his jacket or take a leak after two cups of hot coffee. Tegan was at the end of her latte, which turned ice-cold after neglect. Perhaps she could surprise him with a fancy dinner that she could afford five or five hundred of, but she needed to get one urge settled first.
The cold snow did wonders there. Now for what to surprise Bryant with. She wracked her mind for ideas, until he age came up. As it turned out, Tegan forgot that she was later into her 20’s than she thought. And by that, she meant that she was 30. She didn’t celebrate it and just forgot for a while, until a friend reminded her.
Some weeks before that, it was Spooky Day, and Tegan dressed as the most dowdy bunny to attend a Spooky Day party. Instead of, say, a sexy romper or leotard and rabbit ears, she rented a comfy pink coverall from the Profiteers and painted her face. The host, her dear friend Anderson, couldn’t care less. He picked up the flight suit from his military job, which made him even lazier than Tegan.
“I’m a wingman, or I hope Horace will make me his,” Anderson said, when he shook Tegan’s hand. “Just a bunny?”
“It was my grandma’s idea,” she said. Grandma Bunny loved a good joke and loved a joke about her unusual name even more. She spent a century using it for costume ideas for herself.
Anderson almost suggested calling down his siblings and some friends for video games, until he remembered that Tegan was in the group, and that he had a question or a few for her. So he found the ball used for foosball and had a game with her, one-on-one.
And foosball? That was something she could enjoy. But she noticed that Anderson, usually easy-going, was tense and not hiding it.
“Anything bothering you?” she asked him.
“We’re getting old,” he muttered.
“20’s isn’t old.”
“I’m 29, that means you’re 30,” he said.
“Really? I mean, I shouldn’t forget these things, but I should have given you something for your 29th!”
“Yeah, but you’re 30. Thinking about making things serious with someone?”
“Bryant says we’re ‘Facebook Official,’ whatever that means. I don’t even use that blasted site.”
“Let’s cut to the chase. Are you gonna marry him?”
She stopped, realizing that her mind didn’t have an answer to that. Between inventions and more inventions, she had no room to think about that future. Even immortality seemed more tangible, especially as she smelled the pungent smell of ambrosia every now and again when the elders skipped their normal meals. They gave more hints towards immortality than Bryant did of perhaps wanting a future beyond a cold relationship.
“I dunno. The idea isn’t bad.”
Of course, she probably said that to save herself from explaining, and instead decided to leave the party early, though not early enough to hear Anderson try to tell her “well, my uncle Keon was wondering. He said that he’s a better choice than him, and geez, that man taught you math!”
As nice as Keon was, a lot of things sounded better than that!
Tegan wiped the snow off her back and ran across the street to the consignment shop, just before closing. The clerk was sweeping behind the counter.
“Sorry, I locked the till for the night,” he said.
“The last clerk was nicer about this,” Tegan said. “What happened to him?”
“Beats me. But I own the store now. Business is slow, and I have no reason to unlock the till.”
“But, what if I needed a ring?”
“A ring? Like how expensive of a ring? I did get one today. Some poor sucker needed to pay for a divorce.”
“It’s a guys’ ring, right?”
“Sure it is.”
“Works for an engagement?”
“You’re one of those women, huh?” the clerk asked.
“I guess I am!” Tegan would be the first woman in the family, blood or marriage, to lead the proposal. It wasn’t going to hurt the family to change the roles, and the elders would be more fine with the Curious name being passed on, rather than having an immortal Moreno around.
“But I have it,” Tegan said, fishing a lot of cash out of her coat. Twenty-thousand simoleons greeted the clerk, and his eyes lit up.
“I apologize. Have the ring! 24-karat gold, pretty sure it’s sapphire in the center. I’m not a jeweler, but I got a lot of money for this.”
“I think you deserved it.” Tegan eyed the piece with delight. “He’ll love it, I know he will.”
Bryant found here there right after closing, and already thought it was suspicious that the clerk left the door unlocked and a few good out on the shelves.
“That idiot,” Bryant muttered, as he took his jacket off. “You think you can just stay here all alone?”
“He wouldn’t leave me alone like this if it wasn’t safe, right?”
“Please, chivalry isn’t dead to me, but most of these thugs don’t even know the word. Do you think that Hephaestus would buy you a latte?” In fact, he did that plenty of times. He needed a pick-me-up after work and Tegan did too. But she wasn’t about to break her own euphoria with a fight.
“Point taken. There is a lot of bad in this world. But how about something to make you happy?”
“Alright, you got me guessing.” A loose top worked wondered for hiding things like jewelry.
She got down on her knees. “Well, we’re both growing up. You’re just turned 30, didn’t you?” He nodded.
“We can start thinking about the future!” She whipped out the box, opening it to reveal the shiny, refurbished ring inside that glittered in the lights kept on for the lovebirds.
“Shouldn’t I be doing this to you?” Bryant asked.
“I didn’t want you to have to buy the ring,” she said. “It’s the best I could find.”
“I mean, it’s lovely, but…but chivalry-“
“You do enough of that for me. I think I can be the knight sometimes.”
On any other day, Bryant would dig into his deep sack of misogyny to counter that statement, but heck, he had an expensive ring in front of his eyes! And a very earnest Tegan asking him to take it.
“Oh honey, I don’t care either. I think it’s great!” He even jumped up and down like an excited child.
He locked her in a hug once the ring was squeezed onto one of his thick fingers, but Tegan promised to find a jeweler to resize it for him. Even with a band of metal making one finger numb, Bryant held on and smiled, eyes closed.
“I’ll get you something nice too,” he said in her ear. “And by that, I mean a nice ring.” True to his words, Tegan found a golden ring with a large opal at the main gem. Surely, he dropped a lot of money on it. And that was almost enough to guilt Tegan into staying.
But she put her ring in a box that night, tired of its sickly cold feel against her skin. She briefly devised ways to recycle it for…someone else. Anyone else. Because not all of the rings and chivalry and euphoria in the world was going to win her over to Bryant, and even Tegan could see that, starting that night.
Maybe the sage elders of the town would give her some insight.
Word Count for this chapter:
4,132 (first chapter to break 4,000 words!)
Word Count so far:
168,435And if you're annoyed with Tegan being thick in the head about Bryant, don't worry, because she actually does something about it soon. The sage elders of the town might get through to her where you enraged readers fail.
I'll fully admit to just wanting some fluff in this chapter, hence a random section about cute little Piper. Not that I think any of you mind.
Notes:
- The name I gave to Tegan's harvester has a deeper meaning. The name "Tessa" actually means..."harvester." It was also originally going to be Tegan's name, but I decided against it for personal reasons. The numbers were pretty random, though.
- I calculated Tegan as being in the 22nd Century like so:
- The dynasty started in 2057.
- I'd say that Franco was born within six to ten years of it starting. So in the 2060's
- Franco was 40 when Lily was born (just after his adult birthday). Making Lily born in the early 2100's.
- Lily was about 37 when Tegan was born (right before her adult birthday). Still the 22nd century.
- If Tegan is 30 in this chapter, then she's still in the 22nd century. Around 2167 - 2173.
Why they haven't cured cancer in their universe is anyone's guess.