Moonbay, an anthro panda, kept a close eye on her phone, looking for a text or call. She brushed her raven hair back behind her ears, watching Mei, her younger sister, in the gas station. The girl was roaming around the snacks, grabbing up anything that caught her attention or she felt the impulse to grab. Moonbay rolled her eyes, sinking into the seat, and rested her head on her hand. On the dashboard was a photo of their mother.
Both of them were anthros or furries, as some people called them--pandas one of the most sought-after species in the world. Moonbay, twenty-six, is the older of the two. Beautiful, curvy, and has an ample bust to catch anyone's eye. Her most notable feature was a white patch on top of her hair. No one knew how that came about, and some had confused her age for someone much older. She made a name for herself as a talented reporter. Mei, twenty-three, her younger sister, is slim but still turns a few heads. Athletic and a genius with computers.
Charlotte was a kind soul who devoted everything to the girls. Moonbay smiled, thinking and reminiscing about their best times together. She wouldn't give them up for the world. But unfortunately, her train of thought was wrecked when the backdoor suddenly opened, and Mei threw bags after bags of junk food into the backseat.
"Oh, for fuck's sake, Mei!" The excess sugar and salt in the bags made the girl's stomach turn in knots. "Seriously, We're almost there; you couldn't wait for a few more hours?"
Mei scoffed, getting into the passenger seat. "I'm not the reason we're out here in the first place. Some random stranger offered us a place to stay, and you accepted it without even telling me about it!" She slammed the door with a huff.
Moonbay. "Would you prefer moving in with Dad?" She asked, starting up their car and driving away.
Mei. "And have Sandra up my ass? Fuck. That." She said with great disdain for the woman. She leaned the car seat back to lay down. "Why didn't you tell me we were getting kicked out?"
Moonbay didn't say anything. It wasn't an easy answer. She gripped the wheel tightly, nervously trying to think of the words. Mei looked at her, wearing a stoic expression on her face. "Come on,"
"We're not doing this now." She focused on driving. Keeping her eyes pointed ahead.
"You slept with him..." She said before Moonbay slammed on the breaks, sending them both hurtling into the dashboard. Mei let out a loud grunt before her lips for any blood after biting them from the impact. "WHAT THE FUCK, SUSAN!?" Moonbay's actual name. She never used it much since everyone called her Moonbay. A nickname from grade school. Mei groaned, running her fingers along the inside of her mouth while Moonbay was seething in her seat.
"You wanna know why I didn't say anything?" She gave Mei a look that made the girl briefly freeze up. "Because of this shit right here," she pointed at the console to indicate the present situation. "You're talking like we have other options. That we're not thoroughly and royally fucked because of you."
"Me!? Where the hell do you get off talking to me like this is my fault?"
. "Because it is! You can't hold onto a job for more than a few months and I had to use up my savings to bail us out on multiple occasions." She shook her head, chuckling and leaning on the steering wheel, holding her head. "We're broke, Mei. We're fucking broke."
"Moon, if we held out for a bit longer..."
"YOUR STREAMS WOULDN'T HAVE SAVED US!" Moonbay screamed, slamming her fists on the wheel before she struggled with her seatbelt to get it off and got out and slammed the door shut, rattling the keys. She began pacing in front of the car, trying to calm down. Mei watched her, it was uncommon to see Moonbay lose her temper like this. It was a rare thing to truly make her older sister lose her shit.
Almost twenty minutes passed before Moonbay got back in the car, heavily sighing while she melted into the seat. "Before I got laid off, I interviewed some successful streamers for a piece we were doing, and over two-thirds of them told me about how they had to hold down a job before they made any amount of money from it and that was just to support one person let alone someone who had kids. So you're not seeing the immeasurable amount of static you need to cut through to get people to notice you."
She put the car back into drive and pulled away. Mei just stared at her and hugged her middle.
"I know that..."
"You don't. Nothing is as easy as you think it'll be. I busted my ass at that newspaper for three years before they took me seriously. Even streaming takes time to build up a following." She sighed, glancing at her younger sister, seeing how timid she became after her outburst. Moonbay placed her hand on the center console, open to hold Mei's. "I'm sorry for yelling at you but we don't have a choice right now. It was either accept Rei's invitation or we go live with Dad and the bitch." Mei grabbed her hand, squeezing it tightly.
"Was it though?"
"That's all we have, Mei. I can't stand her any more than you can, and Dad's just as bad. I didn't accept this for myself. I did it for us both."
"But what if they try dragging me into it?"
"They won't. I made it clear to leave you alone. If they make one move towards you and the deal's off. Even if Sandra's a bitch I'd rather put up with her bullshit than see my baby sis forced into something like this. Besides, you wouldn't know what to do with it." She teased earning a playful punch to the arm from Mei.
"Screw you!" The sisters had a good laugh, easing the tension from everything until Mei looked out of the window. "So Mom knew Rei?"
"That's what she said though I can't imagine how close they could have been for Rei to pay for everything when Mom passed."
"Yeah, she always said Rei was just a special friend when she and dad broke up." She spotted something on the side of the road and grabbed Moonbay's arm to make her stop the car. "PULL OVER!" Moonbay slammed on the brakes and looked at Mei, wondering what the hell had her all worked up until she saw it herself: the massive, crumbling remains of an angel.
The towering hollow corpse stood as a reminder of a darker time in the world. It was buried in the ground, its rusted exterior wrapped in vines and overgrowth. Many of them littered the landscape, often drawing the attention of tourists and the occasional scholar for study. Mei looked at the ominous figure and turned to Moonbay. "Remember when Mom showed us one of these before?"
"Ha, how could I forget? We had nightmares for weeks."
Mei giggled, looking at the angel as they started to pull away again. "Do you think we can stop and snap a pic?"
Moonbay. "We don't have time. We're already running late."