First: This is a choose your own adventure story!
It is not one story with three chapters, it is three different stories with the same beginning and you get to choose which ending you want! It was super fun to write and I hope y'all like it.
Second: This is not a fan-fic, but it is sort of close. It sort of exists parallel to the show 'Outsiders'. (Not 'The Outsiders' movie, but the show about the mountain people) I know it's not a super popular show, but I loved it and it immediately struck a chord in me and I wanted to write a story in the same world. If you have seen it, you will recognize some of the people, even if the names are different and it isn't 100% in line with the show. It's just a premise and not an exact fan-fic. :)
I stepped off the bus and looked around, hitching my single bag back onto my shoulder. It was cold here, colder than I was expecting for so early in the fall. Back home... no. This was home now. Back where I had lived before, it was still hot. My t-shirt wasn't going to cut it. I tried to remember if I'd grabbed a long sleeve shirt or a flannel, but couldn't. I would have to dig through my bag to see. It had all been so rushed and frantic. Everything had happened so quickly, I was still in shock and hadn't come to grips with anything yet.
Gemma was gone.
"You Springmeyer?" a man asked, making me jump and turn around while also trying to back away from the voice. It ended with me on my ass in the parking lot. The older man looked at me dubiously, then looked around the lot again. "I was told to pick up Ms Springmeyer? You her? You don't look like they said, but I don't see no one else?" he said, offering his hand to help me up.
"I'm her," I answered tersely, picking myself up off the ground. "Who are you? I was told my Auntie would be waiting for me?"
"Mrs Evanwood is homebound, she called me to get you."
"Who are you?"
"Just your Uber, kid."
"I'm not a kid. They have Uber out here? That's... surprising."
"I'm the one and only. You coming or not? Mrs Evanwood was clear on her instructions not to take too long, she aint got much money to spend."
"I'll cover it. How far out is she?"
"Far out?"
"In the country."
"She's in town, only just, but she is in town. Are you coming or not?"
"How do I know you are who you say you are?"
"Look, kid, I have someone to pick up as soon as I drop you off. I knew your goddamn name, didn't I? And your aunt's name?"
"I told you I am not a kid!"
"She said you was still in school."
"I am, but I am eighteen. Not a kid."
"My eight year old grandson is bigger'n you. You comin or not?"
I sighed, then motioned the man to the row of cars. I didn't know which one was his, but I didn't really care. Why hadn't anyone told me my aunt was homebound? This wouldn't be much different than staying with Gemma.
He opened the back door to an older PT Cruiser and I climbed in, clutching my bag. "Is it always so cold so soon here?" I asked when he got in the front.
"Hell, kid, this aint cold. Where you from that this is cold?"
"Atlanta. It feels cold to me. What's it like living right up against the mountains like this?"
"Ignore the mountains, kid. Ain't no good ever gone up or come down those mountains."
"I wasn't planning a hike, I was just asking. I'd never seen mountains till the bus ride. I was thinking about it on the way here when I saw them, the days must be short here, right?"
"Same 24 hours they have in Atlanta," he grunted.
"No, I mean the sun. This town can't get much sun."
"We get what we need. No one knew Mrs Evanwood had kin."
"You know her?"
"Used to go to church with her when she still went. We came up together, though she was a bit older. She was in school with my oldest brother, Dewey. Gone these last six years now. Stroke did for him. She never mentioned any kin anywhere."
"She's a half sister to my Gemma. Umm. Lois Mills. I called her Gemma, like Gramma, but I couldn't say it right when I was little. It stuck."
"No folks?"
"I do, I guess, somewhere."
"Aint that the way anymore? Here's the park where she lives. Look for 618."
"A trailer park?" I asked incredulously. I had never seen one in real life, just on TV.
"Yeah. She used to have a piece off down the road, but had to move it in here when she couldn't get around much anymore. There. That one there, the brown and tan one."
I stared dismally at the tiny old trailer. Where would I possibly sleep?!? I handed the man my card and he ran it, then I doubled it for a tip.
"Hey, thanks kid!" he said excitedly.
I nodded, a little confused. It was still less than a $10 charge. "You have a card or number if I need to go somewhere?" I asked, holding onto the door for a moment.
"You have the app? I am the only one local."
"Got it, thanks."
I went to the door as he drove off and knocked.
Silence.
I knocked again, feeling stressed.
Silence.
"You the Springmeyer kid?" a woman yelled from the kitchen window of the trailer next door. It was so close I could see her features when I turned to look at her.
"Yeah?"
"She thought you'd be older."
"I'm eighteen."
"Oh. Well you aint much of nothing, are ya? You don't get that from her side, no sirree. Where you come up from, girl?"
"My name is Odette. Det to my friends. I am from Atlanta. Is she home?"
"Yeah, but she's havin' her nap right now. Why don't you step over, I am making her dinner like I do most days. I'm Marjorie, my friends call me Marge."
Marge was a huge woman. Large enough that I wondered how she got in and out of her door and how she managed to stay on her feet at the stove so long as she cooked. She towered over me and her size was intimidating as hell. Her trailer was clean though, and it smelled like food. I couldn't say what kind, there was a mix, like she never stopped cooking. From the dishes piled up, she did a lot of cooking. She went back and forth between washing dishes and minding what she was cooking as she talked and I stared, wide eyed. What was she going to do with all of that food?!?
My question was answered in short order when two men came in and put their feet up to the table. Marge introduced me, but they dismissed me almost immediately as they talked about their shift at the mine and 'Mr Dupree', who seemed to be a supervisor. Before they left, another joined them and then another just as they were leaving. As I sat there waiting, a good dozen men came in to eat, smiling and talking happily and telling Marge how great the food was.
Finally, my curiosity made me speak up. "Is this like a restaurant or something?" I asked during a lull in the conversation.
One of the men laughed and Marge gave me a smile. "No, Det, I just like to cook. So the boys bring me groceries and I cook, then they come and eat. All of'm what live here and some what don't. All of'm single, mind you. Though, Mr Anderson will come some days. His wife aint much of a cook and she has the fits."
"The fits?"
"You know. That depression the schooled folk call it. She wont get out of bed and she cries over her lost babes. He's a good man to stay with her and take care of her."
I blinked. Was she serious? "She lost babies... and she has depression... and he is a good man for not leaving her?" I asked, but she didn't hear the dangerous tone in my voice. One of the men did.
"Where's this kid from, Marge? Aint seen her around here, she one of the miners brats?"
"Brat?!?" I demanded, sitting up.
"Phaw, now, Joel. You hushit up. Det, all the miners kids are called brats. All of em. She aint a brat, Joel, she's the girl what was coming for Mrs Evanwood."
"Well this is just a kid! They said the girl coming was old enough to take care of herself and Mrs Evanwood too!"
"I'm eighteen!" I yelled, standing.
He blinked at me and the man sitting with him looked at me dubiously. Joel reassessed the standing me and half nodded. "I guess I can see it. Short thing though, aint ya? Cute too. You have a man?"