(Just shy of a decade after Across the Tracks was first written, and I've decided that it needed to be redone. This was my first ever outing as a writer, and in many ways, was my first story I wrote outside of high school assignments. I feel that as a person, I've grown as a writer, I've grown in what I consider good storylines and plot, and I've decided that Across the Tracks deserved a rewrite. I love the characters and story I created with this, but there are certain parts of it that years later, I've wished I could change. I was literally eighteen when I wrote this, so there's quite a bit of stuff that just makes me... embarrassed that I want to change.
So, this will be the start of the rewritten story, featuring your favorite (and least favorite) characters once again. I don't know how much of it will be changed from the original, although I can guarantee that quite a bit of it will be much more fleshed out. I hope you enjoy this new take on an old story, and for those that also enjoyed the Hammer of the Gods story, it will also be getting the same treatment. If you don't like the new versions of either, my apologies. But a writer has to love their work, or it won't matter if anyone else does, and this is my attempt at making that happen.)
The loud jangle of an alarm cut through the darkness of the room, shattering the pre-dawn quiet. The flickering lights of the alarm clock read 04:30, and a large paw of a hand reached out from under the covers, tapping around the bedside table as if searching for it before the fingers grabbed onto the small clock and hit the button on top.
Otis rolled over in bed, away from the table, and fought the invasive thought of smashing his alarm clock by throwing it far across the room. But throwing it wouldn't get rid of the adult responsibilities of getting out of bed and going to work, so he controlled the urge. He grumbled in the cocoon of his covers, deciding that the last few moments of warmth were going to be something he took advantage of. It wasn't cold outside yet, but nothing was better than waking up in a warm bed. Finally, he opened his eyes and got out from under the covers, rubbing his hand across his face as he sat up on the edge of the bed and blinked slowly, full wakefulness finally coming to him.
He looked out his window, the whole reason he had picked his apartment, the open blinds facing east, pre-dawn light turning the night sky into a slowly lightening shade of purple and shades of blue.. Considering he had to be at the shop before the sun rose, it seemed a foolish reason to have picked the apartment now. But, the rent was good, and he had managed to even get some of that lowered by helping out the apartment maintenance man with repairs to some of the utilities and things around here. Not bad for someone his age, especially when most of the guys that he knew were still living at home.
He finally stood, padding across the thick rug that his grandfather had bought for him as a housewarming gift so that he could take his shower. As he turned the water on to let it warm up, he checked his face in the mirror, deciding to wait a little longer before he would shave. If he did it too much, it made his face break out, and he didn't want to relive the early puberty years of acne. As always, he looked past the blue eyes that women liked, past his strong jaw and high cheekbones, only seeming to notice that his nose was crooked and thick from being badly broken more than once, the fact that his hair was thinning, and the fact that he still carried a little extra weight. Genetics were just fantastic, huh? He thought to himself.
As he went to step in the shower, he bit back a sharp curse as he very quickly realized that the hot water was out. Again. That was going to have to be something he looked into fixing when he got home, but at the moment he just didn't have the time for it. He shivered his way through the cold shower, water like icy needles hitting his body, before finally being clean enough that he could justify being finished. He toweled off, hurrying to get dressed and get out the door. With a little hustle, he'd have time to grab a coffee and breakfast sandwich before work.
* * * * * *
Ariel prayed to whatever god was listening, not even knowing if there was a god of mechanics or cars, but promising whoever existed, even if it was a Catholic saint or something, that she would start regularly praying to them if her car would just stop breaking down. With a barely suppressed growl of frustration, she slammed the gear shift into position, since that kind of rough talk was the only thing it seemed to understand. She made another noise of frustration when the car seemed to grind and groan underneath her.
I just should have went with an automatic, she thought to herself, the car starting to make another grinding noise that was worrying her, But no, I wanted to prove something and went with a manual.
Suddenly, her gauges started to act up, the engine temperature shooting to peg itself, oil pressure doing the same. It was like a scene out of Poltergeist, all of her emergency symbols flashing across the panel, before suddenly the car just died, everything reversing from pegged to not showing any response at all.
She couldn't help herself, screaming the word fuck as her car didn't seem to have any power anymore, but a faint glimmer of hope brightened up her otherwise shitty day. Her power steering was out, but she managed to plant her feet against the floorboard for leverage and turn her wheel over, the coasting car coming to a halt about fifty feet away from the big garage doors of the convenient mechanics shop.
* * * * * * *
Otis was, in a word, fucking jamming. He was the only mechanic in the shop so far today, which usually would make him angry, but there was music. A lot of music. He had a few little jobs to finish up, mostly of the fit and finish variety, so he could just do whatever for a little bit. He was taking a sip of coffee, dancing to some Aggrolites, when he heard an obviously female voice scream in frustration during a break between songs.
He stepped out the front of the shop, looking around for a moment as he took a sip from his coffee mug, before he deduced through excellent detective skills that the 1992 Dodge Neon with either white smoke or white vapor coming from under the hood, being driven by a woman, might just be the source of the noise that had broken up his calm morning. He set his mug down, walking down the sidewalk before finally cupping his hands around his face and calling out.